• Int J Obstet Anesth · Aug 2019

    Review

    Post-cesarean delivery pain. Management of the opioid-dependent patient before, during and after cesarean delivery.

    • R Landau.
    • Virginia Apgar Professor of Anesthesiology, Department of Anesthesiology, Columbia University Medical Center, Columbia University College of Physicians & Surgeons, New York, USA. Electronic address: rl262@cumc.columbia.edu.
    • Int J Obstet Anesth. 2019 Aug 1; 39: 105-116.

    AbstractThe opioid crisis has reached an unprecedented magnitude in the United States and worldwide, and data on opioid use and misuse in the obstetric population are extremely concerning. Despite an abundant number of studies evaluating strategies to prevent neonatal opioid withdrawal syndrome in babies born to mothers who are chronic opioid users, in babies born to mothers using chronic opioids, numerous questions remain unanswered, including (1) how to optimally manage postpartum pain in opioid-dependent patients (2) how to reconcile buprenorphine and methadone use with intrapartum and post-partum analgesia, so as to avoid opioid withdrawal during and after delivery (3) how to safely and effectively provide a stepwise multimodal approach that incorporates systemic opioid-sparing approaches, such as neuraxial opioids, clonidine, ketamine, gabapentin, and regional anesthetic blocks, to ensure adequate pain relief while avoiding opioid withdrawal (4) how to optimally manage post-partum recovery and (5) how to avoid excessive opioid prescription and possibly leftover opioids that may promote persistent use, misuse and diversion. With the recognition that an increasing number of pregnant women are taking chronic opioids, the goals of this review article are to summarize the existing literature on post-cesarean pain management in the obstetric patient with an opioid-use disorder; and to provide clinicians with a stepwise approach for management before, as well as during and after, cesarean delivery of women who have been chronically using opioids during their pregnancy.Copyright © 2019. Published by Elsevier Ltd.

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