• Acta Anaesthesiol Scand · Sep 1996

    Randomized Controlled Trial Clinical Trial

    Preoperative ketorolac administration has no preemptive analgesic effect for minor orthopaedic surgery.

    • C Vanlersberghe, M H Lauwers, and F Camu.
    • Department of Anaesthesiology, Flemish Free University of Brussels, Belgium.
    • Acta Anaesthesiol Scand. 1996 Sep 1;40(8 Pt 1):948-52.

    AbstractThe utility of preoperative ketorolac administration to reduce the intensity and duration of postoperative pain was compared with placebo in a randomized double-blind design of 60 ASA 1-2 patients scheduled for minor orthopaedic surgery. No opioids nor local anaesthetic blocks were used during surgery. The patients received either 30 mg ketorolac IV before surgery followed by a placebo injection after surgery or the reverse. Postoperative pain intensity was assessed repeatedly for 6 h using a visual analogue scale. No differences in pain intensity were observed between the two groups except for the initial 15-min postoperative assessments in the ketorolac group. The time to first rescue morphine administration and the total morphine consumption during the 6-h observation period were similar. It is concluded that the preoperative administration of ketorolac did not provide a significant preemptive analgesic benefit with regard to postoperative pain relief and opioid dose-sparing effect.

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