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Randomized Controlled Trial
A Perioperative Course of Gabapentin Does Not Produce a Clinically Meaningful Improvement in Analgesia after Cesarean Delivery: A Randomized Controlled Trial.
Perioperative gabapentin does not significantly improve pain after neuraxial caesarean section.
pearl- David T Monks, David W Hoppe, Kristi Downey, Vibhuti Shah, Paul Bernstein, and Jose C A Carvalho.
- From the Departments of Anesthesia (D.T.M., D.W.H., K.D., J.C.A.C.), Paediatrics (V.S.), and Obstetrics and Gynecology (P.B., J.C.A.C.), Mount Sinai Hospital, University of Toronto, Toronto, Ontario, Canada.
- Anesthesiology. 2015 Aug 1;123(2):320-6.
BackgroundStudies examining the efficacy of a single preoperative dose of gabapentin for analgesia after cesarean delivery (CD) have been inconclusive. The authors hypothesized that a perioperative course of gabapentin would improve analgesia after CD.MethodsThis single-center, randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled, parallel-group, superiority trial was designed to determine the analgesic efficacy of a perioperative course of gabapentin when added to a multimodal analgesic regimen. Women scheduled for elective CD during spinal anesthesia were randomized to receive a perioperative oral course of either gabapentin (600 mg preoperatively followed by 200 mg every 8 h for 2 days) or placebo. Postoperative pain was measured at 24 and 48 h, at rest and on movement, on a visual analogue scale (VAS, 0 to 100 mm). The primary outcome was pain on movement at 24 h. Neonatal outcomes, opiate consumption, VAS satisfaction (0 to 100 mm), adverse effects, and persistent pain were also assessed.ResultsBaseline characteristics were similar between groups. There was a statistically significant but small reduction in VAS pain score (mean [95% CI]) on "movement" (40 mm [36 to 45] vs. 47 mm [42 to 51]; difference, -7 mm [-13 to 0]; P = 0.047) at 24 h in the gabapentin (n = 100) compared with control group (n = 97). There was more sedation in the gabapentin group at 24 h (55 vs. 39%, P = 0.026) but greater patient VAS satisfaction (87 vs. 77 mm, P = 0.003).ConclusionsA perioperative course of gabapentin produces a clinically insignificant improvement in analgesia after CD and is associated with a higher incidence of sedation.
This article appears in the collections: Perioperative Gabapentin and Pregabalin and Regional stuff.
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