Articles: acute-pain.
-
Postgraduate medicine · Aug 2024
ReviewIbuprofen/acetaminophen fixed-dose combination as an alternative to opioids in management of common pain types.
Opioids are frequently used first line to manage acute pain in a variety of settings; however, the use of nonprescription analgesics for acute pain is recognized by experts as a practical and effective opioid-sparing strategy. Variations in dosages and formulations and a lack of standardization in reporting clinical data hinder the awareness of nonprescription treatments and recommendation of their use before opioids and other prescription options. A fixed-dose combination (FDC) of two common nonprescription analgesics, ibuprofen (IBU) and acetaminophen (APAP), is an appealing alternative to opioids in acute pain settings with a range of potential benefits. ⋯ A literature search was performed to identify clinical studies that directly compared IBU/APAP FDCs with opioids or nonopioids and measured the need for opioid rescue therapy in acute pain. Across studies, IBU/APAP FDCs consistently demonstrated pain relief similar to or better than opioid and nonopioid comparators and reliably reduced the use of rescue opioids with fewer adverse events. Based on these data, healthcare clinicians should consider FDC nonprescription analgesics as a potential first-line option for the management of acute pain.
-
Current guidelines recommend a personalized, multimodal, and interdisciplinary approach for the treatment of chronic pain. Already in the acute treatment of postoperative pain, it can be useful to minimize risk factors for chronification. Auricular vagus nerve stimulation (aVNS) could be an effective non-drug therapy for the treatment of chronic and acute pain. ⋯ This review indicates that aVNS can be a complementary and effective non-drug treatment for patients with chronic and acute postoperative pain. Future studies in these indications should focus on standardizing and optimizing treatment parameters, inclusion of quality-of-life outcome parameters, and longer follow-up periods to better understand the sustainable therapeutic effect of aVNS.
-
Randomized Controlled Trial
A sequential, multiple-assignment, randomized trial of analgesic strategies for acute musculoskeletal Pain.
Most methodologically rigorous, ED-based, comparative effectiveness analgesic studies completed in the last two decades failed to find a clinically important difference between the comparators. We believe that many of these comparative effectiveness studies were biased towards the null hypothesis because some ED patients with intense pain will respond to relatively mild interventions. We hypothesized that including a run-in period would alter the results of an acute pain RCT. ⋯ Among patients with acute musculoskeletal pain, using an acetaminophen first strategy did not alter pain outcomes.