Articles: analgesia.
-
The epidural administration of narcotics and local anesthetics is an effective method of postoperative pain management. An improved quality of pain control with less sedation promotes better pulmonary function, early ambulation, and probably fewer postoperative complications. Nurses caring for these patients must have a strong knowledge base and specialized skills to deliver safe and effective nursing care.
-
Anesthesia and analgesia · Jan 1991
Randomized Controlled Trial Clinical TrialEpidural morphine with butorphanol for postoperative analgesia after cesarean delivery.
Epidural morphine has been used more and more to provide long-lasting postoperative analgesia after cesarean delivery. However, the incidence of pruritus (20%-93%) and nausea (17%-60%) detract from the usefulness of epidural morphine. The purpose of this study was to evaluate, in 30 patients having epidural anesthesia for cesarean delivery, the analgesic efficacy and side effects when a combination of epidural morphine, a mu-receptor agonist, and butorphanol, a mu-receptor antagonist and kappa-receptor agonist, was administered. ⋯ Patients were monitored for 24 h after administration of the study medications. There were no significant differences between the groups in visual analogue pain scores, time to first analgesic request, respiratory rate, or Trieger dot test performance in the 24 h immediately after these epidural injections. There were three patients in group 1 and one patient in group 2 who experienced oxygen saturations less than 90%. (No patients in group 3 developed an oxygen saturation less than 92%.) The patients in group 3 did not require treatment for pruritus or nausea, a response significantly different (P less than 0.001 and P less than 0.05, respectively) from group 1 or group 2.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
-
Klinische Wochenschrift · Jan 1991
Review[How painful is long-term ventilation? Considerations on the importance of analgesia within the scope of analgosedation].
The goal of analgesia and sedation in intensive care units is most often achieved using numerous drug combinations, mostly justified by physicians' and nurses' habits instead of rational pharmacological criteria for the choice of drugs and dosages. The present paper aims at defining the analgesic situation of ventilated intensive care patients and concludes from analogy with other, better understood states of pain that the importance of analgesic drugs is frequently overrated. To achieve effective analgesia and sedation in individual patients, the dosage must be titrated to individual needs. The author suggests that standardized baseline analgesia should be used, which enables sedation to be titrated, whereas the opposite is not practicable in clinical routine.
-
... While clinical practice is clearly moving toward more compassionate use of sedatives and analgesics in the care of the dying, the legal system has been lagging behind most ethical opinions in this area. The criminal investigation into the administration of morphine to a patient before ventilator withdrawal in Minnesota was a grim reminder of the hazards sometimes involved in the practice of good medicine. ⋯ The fact that the caregivers involved are willing to risk the potentially disastrous consequences of falsifying a medical record can be taken as evidence of their commitment to doing what they perceive to be morally required. Nevertheless, this practice should clearly be condemned, since it gives the impression that caregivers are engaged in an unlawful or unethical practice. Only through continued forthright discussion in the medical literature can we arrive at ethically defensible approaches to administering sedation and analgesia that assure the most compassionate care of the dying patient.
-
The realization that many intensive care patients develop psychoreactive problems ranging from confusion to depression to frank mutism led us to include Dehydrobenzperidol (DHB) in our analgesia and sedation scheme. The early prophylactic administration of this drug was found to be particularly effective in the prevention of delirium following an alcohol and/or drug overdose.