Aesthetic surgery journal
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Aesthetic surgery journal · May 2008
Pain control in augmentation mammaplasty: safety and efficacy of indwelling catheters in 644 consecutive patients.
In an effort to give patients an additional effective form of analgesia, indwelling catheters for the instillation of a long-acting local anesthetic have been used to alleviate postoperative pain in patients undergoing augmentation mammaplasty. ⋯ A prospective study of 644 consecutive augmentation mammaplasty patients shows that indwelling catheters for the postoperative instillation of bupivacaine are both safe and effective in the management of postoperative pain. This gives the patient an additional form of analgesia, limited to the operative site, which is helpful in a multimodal pain management program. Both continuous flow and intermittent bolus self-administration systems are effective and their patient ratings are indistinguishable.