Articles: pain-management-methods.
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Anasthesiol Intensivmed Notfallmed Schmerzther · Sep 2021
[Perioperative Pain Management - Patient Information, Informed Consent and Discharge Management].
Many surgical procedures are followed by postoperative pain. Acute pain should be treated optimally for medical and ethical reasons. Different psychological, physical, interventional and pharmacological methods are employed in a procedure specific and institution specific matter. ⋯ To address these issues adjustments in informed consent and patient information and education are necessary. This includes also the information and education of caregivers. This article describes the legal framework, technical solutions and the impact of placebo and nocebo effects on doctor-patient communication.
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Anasthesiol Intensivmed Notfallmed Schmerzther · Sep 2021
[Procedure Specific Pain Therapy - the PROSPECT Idea].
Acute pain therapy following operative or interventional procedures has become a compulsory component of a modern perioperative patient management. A structured pain regimen has several clear advantages: it leads to an improvement of the patients' quality of life in the short term, it reduces perioperative morbidity in the medium term, it reduces pain chronification in the long term, at the same time improving the economic efficiency due to an accelerated mobilization, a reduction of the hospitalization and an avoidance of complication inherent costs. This article provides detailed information on the change of paradigm, away from a generalized and rather unspecific acute pain therapy towards a problem oriented procedure specific regimen. It points out two examples of the PROSPECT (PROcedure SPECific pain managemenT) methodology and explains its background.
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Randomized Controlled Trial
Anterior Quadratus Lumborum Block Does Not Provide Superior Pain Control after Hip Arthroscopy: A Double-Blinded Randomized Controlled Trial.
Hip arthroscopy is associated with moderate to severe postoperative pain. This prospective, randomized, double-blinded study investigates the clinically analgesic effect of anterior quadratus lumborum block with multimodal analgesia compared to multimodal analgesia alone. The authors hypothesized that an anterior quadratus lumborum block with multimodal analgesia would be superior for pain control. ⋯ Anterior quadratus lumborum block may not add to the benefits provided by multimodal analgesia alone after hip arthroscopy. Anterior quadratus lumborum block did not cause a motor deficit. The lack of treatment effect in this study demonstrates a surgical procedure without benefit from this novel block.
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Despite the major advances in analgesic techniques, pain relief in coughing after abdominal surgery remains challenging. Cough-related pain causes postoperative respiratory complications by impairing sputum clearance; nevertheless, an effective technique to abolish it is not yet available. We devised the bilateral flank compression (BFC) maneuver, in which the flanks are compressed medially using both hands. We conducted a prospective, single-center, single arm, nonrandomized, open-label, interventional trial, to investigate whether the BFC maneuver relieves cough-related pain after abdominal surgery and examined the efficacy of this maneuver in relation to patient characteristics and surgical factors. ⋯ The BFC maneuver relieves cough-related pain after abdominal surgery and may help prevent of postoperative pulmonary complications.
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To evaluate efficacy in reducing postoperative pain and opioid analgesia of a novel interdisciplinary strategy combining preoperative thoracolumbar interfascial plane (TLIP) block and percutaneous/endoscopic transforaminal lumbar interbody fusion surgery and to determine time to first postoperative ambulation and hospital length of stay. ⋯ TLIP block significantly improves patient outcome at hospital discharge after transforaminal lumbar interbody fusion surgery without postoperative administration of opioids. A prospective study is recommended to confirm our preliminary results.