Articles: opioid.
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Retrospective controlled cohort. ⋯ In postoperative PSF for patients with AIS receiving LB through ESPB, those who did not receive a PCA had lower opioid consumption without worse pain scores or mobility and had a lower LOS. Adding LB through ESPB to postoperative pain regimens effectively replaces a PCA by providing the same pain control and reducing overall opioid consumption and LOS.
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Pain is common during pregnancy yet there are few contemporary studies of opioid utilisation in pregnancy. We aimed to describe prescription analgesic opioid use during pregnancy across four regions: Oceania [New South Wales (Australia), New Zealand], North America [Ontario (Canada), United States (US)], Northern Europe [Denmark, Finland, Iceland, Norway, Sweden, United Kingdom (UK)], and East Asia (Hong Kong, South Korea, Taiwan). ⋯ In this large multinational study, we observed wide global variation in prevalence of analgesic opioid use in pregnancy, yet patterns of use by sociodemographic- and pregnancy characteristics were relatively consistent. Analgesic opioid use remained stable or downward trending over time in most, but not all, countries.
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Curr Opin Anaesthesiol · Feb 2025
Integrating regional blocks into Enhanced Recovery After Surgery protocols for cesarean delivery: optimizing postoperative recovery.
This review aims to synthesize the current literature on the use of regional blocks to enhance and optimize postoperative recovery after cesarean delivery, highlighting key strategies, challenges, and emerging trends. ⋯ Managing pain after cesarean delivery continues to pose a significant challenge. The overall prevalence of acute postoperative pain remains high (58%) and, even when strict adherence to established guidelines is ensured, approximately 25% of patients report inadequate pain control. Within a multimodal analgesic framework, when neuraxial morphine - still considered the gold standard - is not an option, the use of peripheral nerve and fascial plane blocks has demonstrated clear benefits. Recent literature suggests that quadratus lumborum block may serve as a promising alternative to intrathecal morphine for women who cannot tolerate opioids. Additionally, incorporating certain regional techniques alongside neuraxial morphine may further improve postoperative analgesia, especially for patients at high risk of severe postoperative pain and those who have contraindications to other analgesic modalities.
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Breast surgery is frequently associated with significant acute postoperative pain, necessitating effective pain management strategies. Both thoracic paravertebral block (PVB) and interpectoral plane and pectoserratus plane (IP+PS) blocks have been used to relieve pain after breast surgery. ⋯ PVB and IP+PS blocks offer comparable analgesic efficacy and opioid-sparing effects after breast surgery, with no meaningful differences in 24-h MME consumption, pain scores, or PONV incidence.
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To examine the demographic and clinical characteristics of patients attending pain management services who were receiving opioid agonist treatment (ie, methadone or buprenorphine for the treatment of opioid use disorder) in comparison to those taking prescription opioid analgesics in oral morphine equivalent daily doses at low (<40 mg) and high doses (>100 mg) using a national database from the electronic Persistent Pain Outcomes Collaboration (ePPOC) in Australia. ⋯ These findings highlight the need for mental health treatment and the necessity of tailored multidisciplinary pain management for people in opioid agonist treatment.