Nielsen B N, Henneberg S W, Schmiegelow K, Friis S M, Rømsing J
Department of Anaesthesiology, The Juliane Marie Centre, Copenhagen University Hospital Rigshospitalet, Copenhagen, Denmark.
Department of Paediatrics and Adolescent Medicine, The Juliane Marie Centre, Copenhagen University Hospital Rigshospitalet, Copenhagen, Denmark.
Acta Anaesthesiol Scand. 2015 Aug;59(7):830-45. doi: 10.1111/aas.12529. Epub 2015 Apr 24.
Opioids applied peripherally at the site of surgery may produce postoperative analgesia with few side effects. We performed this systematic review to evaluate the analgesic effect of peripherally applied opioids for acute postoperative pain.
We searched PubMed (1966 to June 2013), Embase (1980 to June 2013), and the Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials (The Cochrane Library 2013, Issue 6). Randomized controlled trials investigating the postoperative analgesic effect of peripherally applied opioids vs. systemic opioids or placebo, measured by pain intensity scores, consumption of supplemental analgesics and time to first analgesic were included. Trials with sample sizes of fewer than 10 patients per treatment group or trials with opioids administered intra-articularly or as peripheral nerve blocks were excluded.
Data from 26 studies, including 1531 patients and 13 different surgical interventions were included. Clinical heterogeneity of the studies was substantial. Meta-analysis indicated statistically significant, but not clinically relevant, reductions in VAS score at 6-8 h (mean difference -4 mm, 95% CI: -6 to -2) and 12 h postoperatively (mean difference -5 mm, 95% CI: -7 to -3) for peripherally applied opioids vs. placebo and statistically significant increased time to first analgesic (mean difference 153 min, 95% CI: 41-265). When preoperative inflammation was reported (five studies), peripherally applied opioids significantly improved postoperative analgesia.
Evidence of a clinically relevant analgesic effect of peripherally applied opioids for acute postoperative pain is lacking. The analgesic effect of peripherally applied opioids may depend on the presence of preoperative inflammation.
在手术部位外周应用阿片类药物可能产生术后镇痛效果,且副作用较少。我们进行了这项系统评价,以评估外周应用阿片类药物对急性术后疼痛的镇痛效果。
我们检索了PubMed(1966年至2013年6月)、Embase(1980年至2013年6月)以及Cochrane对照试验中心注册库(Cochrane图书馆2013年第6期)。纳入了通过疼痛强度评分、补充镇痛药的消耗量和首次使用镇痛药的时间来研究外周应用阿片类药物与全身应用阿片类药物或安慰剂相比的术后镇痛效果的随机对照试验。每个治疗组样本量少于10例患者的试验或关节内给药或作为外周神经阻滞给药的阿片类药物试验被排除。
纳入了26项研究的数据,包括1531例患者和13种不同的手术干预措施。研究的临床异质性很大。荟萃分析表明,与安慰剂相比,外周应用阿片类药物在术后6 - 8小时(平均差值 -4 mm,95%CI:-6至-2)和12小时(平均差值 -5 mm,95%CI:-7至-3)时VAS评分有统计学意义但无临床相关性的降低,且首次使用镇痛药的时间有统计学意义的延长(平均差值153分钟,95%CI:41 - 265)。当报告有术前炎症时(五项研究),外周应用阿片类药物显著改善了术后镇痛效果。
缺乏外周应用阿片类药物对急性术后疼痛有临床相关镇痛效果的证据。外周应用阿片类药物的镇痛效果可能取决于术前炎症的存在。