Articles: pain-management.
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Ambulatory surgery presents unique challenges regarding adequate pain management and education. Studies have documented issues with transfer of information and patient comfort. Our objective was to explore perioperative nurses' perspectives of current practices and challenges with pain management and education. ⋯ Perioperative pain management, assessment, and education practices are inconsistent, incomplete, and sources of frustrations according to participants. Participant experiences highlight the need for improved and standardized models. Patient pain education should use a multidisciplinary approach, beginning at the point of surgery scheduling and continuing through postoperative follow-up.
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Eur Rev Med Pharmacol Sci · Apr 2021
Efficacy of intranasal ketamine for acute pain management in adults: a systematic review and meta-analysis.
This study aimed to compare the efficacy of intranasal (IN) ketamine for pain control with placebo and other analgesics in an emergency setting. ⋯ There may be a role of IN ketamine for acute pain management in adults in an emergency setting. There is a tendency for better pain control with IN ketamine as compared to control and the possibility of similar efficacy of IN ketamine as compared to opioids. However, the results are not unequivocal and are limited by the low number of studies in literature and limited pain indications studied. Further RCTs are required to strengthen the evidence.
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Case Reports
Successful Ultrasound-Guided Erector Spinae Plane Block for Herpes Zoster in the Emergency Department: A Case Report.
The varicella zoster virus, which lies dormant in the dorsal root ganglion, can be reactivated as herpes zoster in times of acute stress or immunosuppression. The herpes zoster lesions can be very painful, both at the time of eruption and after healing, as postherpetic neuralgia. During the acute outbreak time period, many patients visit the emergency department (ED) for pain control, often requiring opioids. ⋯ Here, we demonstrate two cases for which an erector spinae plane (ESP) nerve block with ropivicaine was used as an alternative to opioids, resulting in immediate and safe analgesia in the ED. Both patients had lesions across the back that were significantly impairing their daily lives; one with distribution in the thoracic region, one in the lumbar region. WHY SHOULD AN EMERGENCY PHYSICIAN BE AWARE OF THIS?: ESP blocks can offer quick, easy, and effective analgesia in the ED and can be used in place of parenteral or oral analgesia. It also can be used to reduce opioid prescriptions issued from the ED. Further studies can be done to confirm the efficacy of ESP blocks against opioids through prospective trials.