1 / 45

OPIOIDS AND POST OPERATIVE PAIN MANAGEMENT

OPIOIDS AND POST OPERATIVE PAIN MANAGEMENT. DR S NAIDOO ANAESTHESIOLOGY KALAFONG . WHAT IS PAIN?. Not only sensory Unpleasant and emotional experience Associated with tissue damage. NOCICEPTION. Latin for damage or injury Only refers to the neural response to injury

kerry
Télécharger la présentation

OPIOIDS AND POST OPERATIVE PAIN MANAGEMENT

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. OPIOIDS AND POST OPERATIVE PAIN MANAGEMENT DR S NAIDOO ANAESTHESIOLOGY KALAFONG

  2. WHAT IS PAIN? • Not only sensory • Unpleasant and emotional experience • Associated with tissue damage

  3. NOCICEPTION • Latin for damage or injury • Only refers to the neural response to injury • All nociception causes pain • BUT • Other things also cause pain!!!

  4. Nociception causes ACUTE PAIN – nociceptive pain • Nociception and psycho-behaviouristic factors cause CHRONIC PAIN – neurogenic pain

  5. THE TRANSMISSION OF PAIN

  6. THE BASIC PAIN PATHWAY

  7. Tissue injury stimulate free nerve endings • NOCICEPTORS • Afferent nerve fibres (A∂ and C) conduct stimuli centrally • Peripheral afferents project into the DORSAL HORN and other areas in the SPINAL CORD • SYNAPSES extend over to the SPINOTHALAMIC TRACT and up to the THALAMUS and to the CEREBRAL CORTEX

  8. MODULATION OF PAIN

  9. FACTORS RESPONSIBLE

  10. PERIPHERAL MODULATION • Locally secreted substances • Sensitises the nociceptors • Site of action for NSAIDs, glucocorticoids, opioids

  11. SPINAL MODULATION • Neurotransmitters like glutamate, aspartate and substance P • SUPRASPINAL MODULATION • Descending inhibition in the dorsal horn • These inhibitory tracts are opioid and ἀ-adrenergic

  12. COGNITIVE MODULATON • Distraction of attention • Therefore appropriate treatment agents best suited for various types of pain can be determined from causative agents

  13. PAIN • Requires treatment • Accompanied by unwanted side effects • Acute pain untreated adequately becomes chronic in nature and even more difficult to treat • And has a high morbidity

  14. SO…WHY TREAT PAIN?

  15. SIDE EFFECTS OF PAIN

  16. DRUG THERAPY FOR ACUTE PAIN

  17. NON-OPIATES NSAIDS AND PARACETAMOL Useful when prostaglandins contribute to the injury ASPIRIN IBOPROFEN DICLOFENAK KETOROLAC PARACETAMOL-CODEINE COMBINATIONS

  18. ἀ₂ AGONISTS • KETAMINE – 0,25mg/kg • REGIONAL ANAESTHESIA • The only way to blunt the afferent sympathetic influence therefore the stress response • Analgesia for hours

  19. OPIOIDS momor

  20. OPIOID RECEPTORS • 3 MAIN CLASSES • Mu main pharmacological effects of morphine analgesia, dependence & resp depression • Kappa analgesia, resp depression, gastrointestinal effects • Delta

  21. RECEPTOR PROFILE • ANTAGONISTS • FULL OR PARTIAL AGONISTS

  22. CENTRAL EFFECTS OF OPIOIDS • Analgesia • Anaesthesia • Muscle rigidity • Pupils • Thermoregulation • Euphoria

  23. OPIOIDS • Drugs of choice for the treatment of severe pain • Patients do not get addicted to opioids, they become tolerant • Besides analgesia, opioids are sedating, suppress ventilation, alleviates coughing and can cause bronchospasm

  24. EXAMPLES OF OPIOIDS • NATURAL OCCURRING • MORPHINE, CODEINE • PAPAVERINE, NOSCARPINE • SYNTHETIC • PHENYLPIPERIDINES egfentanyl, sufentanil, etc • PENTAZOCINE, BUPRENORPHINE

  25. SYSTEMIC EFFECTS OF OPIOIDS

  26. CARDIOVASCULAR • DECREASED SYMPATHETIC OUTFLOW • HISTAMINE RELEASE – CVS COLLAPSE • BLUNTS THE SYMPATHETIC RESPONSE TO INTUBATION

  27. RESPIRATORY SYSTEM • DECREASED SENSITIVITY TO AN INCREASED PaCO₂ • HYPOXIC DRIVE DECREASES • CHEST WALL RIGIDITY • BLUNTS THE RESPONSE TO INTUBATION • BRONCHOSPASM

  28. CENTRAL NERVOUS SYSTEM • REDUCED CEREBRAL O₂ CONSUMPTION, BLOOD FLOW AND INTRACRANIAL PRESSURE • LITTLE EEG CHANGES • MIOSIS • STIMULATES THE CETZ

  29. GASTROINTESTINAL SYSTEM • DECREASED GASTRIC EMPTYING • SPASM OF THE SPHINCTER OF ODDI • CONSTIPATION

  30. ENDOCRINE SYSTEM • DECREASED RELEASE OF STRESS HORMONES • ATTENUATES THE INTUBATION RESPONSE

  31. OTHER SIDE EFFECTS OF OPIOIDS • NAUSEA • VOMITING • CONSTIPATION • PRURITIS • URINE RETENTION • HISTAMINE RELEASE • CHEST WALL RIGIDITY

  32. MULTIMODAL ANALGESIA

  33. The application of several modalities to alleviate pain • Used in combination with regional anaesthesia

  34. PRE-EMPTIVE ANALGESIA

  35. Administration of analgesia BEFORE surgery • Found to be less effective in man than animal

  36. HIGH TECHNOLOGY METHODS

  37. Including nerve blocks with or without • Infusions of local anaesthesia • Neuraxial blocks (spinal, epidural block and paravertebral blocks) • Patient controlled analgesia

  38. Nerve Blocks

  39. NeuraxialBlocks

  40. Patient controlled analgesia

  41. So... Please remember: • PAIN IS NOT AN OPTION WHEN WE AS PHYSICIANS HAVE SUCH A WIDE RANGE OF MODALITIES TO TREAT IT!

  42. THANK YOU

More Related