Rivkin Anna, Rivkin Mark A
Anna Rivkin, Pharm.D., BCPS, is Assistant Professor of Pharmacy Practice, Philadelphia College of Pharmacy, University of the Sciences, Philadelphia, PA, and Clinical Pharmacist, Critical Care, Mercy Fitzgerald Hospital, Darby, PA. Mark A. Rivkin, D.O., M.Sc., is Chief Resident, Neurosurgery, Philadelphia College of Osteopathic Medicine, Bala Cynwyd, PA.
Am J Health Syst Pharm. 2014 Nov 1;71(21):1845-57. doi: 10.2146/ajhp130688.
Commonly used nonopioid analgesic agents that are incorporated into multimodal perioperative pain management protocols in spinal surgery are reviewed.
Spinal procedures constitute perhaps some of most painful surgical interventions, as they often encompass extensive muscle dissection, tissue retraction, and surgical implants, as well as prolonged operative duration. Perioperative nonopioid analgesics frequently used in multimodal protocols include gabapentin, pregabalin, acetaminophen, dexamethasone, ketamine, and nonsteroidal antiinflammatory drugs (NSAIDs). There is evidence to suggest that gabapentin is safe and effective in reducing opioid consumption and pain scores at optimal doses of 600-900 mg orally administered preoperatively. Pregabalin 150-300 mg orally perioperatively has been shown to reduce both pain and narcotic consumption. Most reports concur that a single 1-g i.v. perioperative dose is safe in adults and that this dose has been shown to reduce pain and attenuate narcotic requirements. Dexamethasone's influence on postoperative pain has primarily been investigated for minor spinal procedures, with limited evidence for spinal fusions. Ketamine added to a patient-controlled analgesia regimen appears to be efficacious for 24 hours postoperatively when implemented for microdiskectomy and laminectomy procedures at doses of 1 mg/mL in a 1:1 mixture with morphine. For patients undergoing laminectomy or diskectomy, NSAIDs appear to be safe and effective in reducing pain scores and decreasing opioid consumption.
Preemptive analgesic therapy combining nonopioid agents with opioids may reduce narcotic consumption and improve patient satisfaction after spinal surgery. Such therapy should be considered for patients undergoing various spinal procedures in which postoperative pain control has been historically difficult to achieve.
对脊柱手术多模式围手术期疼痛管理方案中常用的非阿片类镇痛药物进行综述。
脊柱手术可能是最疼痛的外科手术之一,因为它们通常涉及广泛的肌肉解剖、组织牵拉、手术植入物,以及较长的手术时间。多模式方案中常用的围手术期非阿片类镇痛药包括加巴喷丁、普瑞巴林、对乙酰氨基酚、地塞米松、氯胺酮和非甾体抗炎药(NSAIDs)。有证据表明,术前口服600 - 900mg的最佳剂量加巴喷丁在减少阿片类药物消耗和疼痛评分方面是安全有效的。围手术期口服150 - 300mg普瑞巴林已显示可减轻疼痛和减少麻醉药物消耗。大多数报告一致认为,围手术期单次静脉注射1g剂量对成年人是安全的,且该剂量已显示可减轻疼痛并减少对麻醉药物的需求。地塞米松对术后疼痛的影响主要在小型脊柱手术中进行了研究,对于脊柱融合手术的证据有限。当在显微椎间盘切除术和椎板切除术过程中以1mg/mL的剂量与吗啡按1:1混合加入患者自控镇痛方案时,氯胺酮在术后24小时似乎是有效的。对于接受椎板切除术或椎间盘切除术的患者,NSAIDs在降低疼痛评分和减少阿片类药物消耗方面似乎是安全有效的。
将非阿片类药物与阿片类药物联合进行超前镇痛治疗可能会减少脊柱手术后的麻醉药物消耗并提高患者满意度。对于各种脊柱手术中术后疼痛控制历来难以实现的患者,应考虑采用这种治疗方法。