Department of Anesthesiology and Intensive Care, Skåne University Hospital, Lund, Sweden.
Department of Clinical Sciences, Lund University, Lund, Sweden.
Pain Pract. 2019 Jun;19(5):552-569. doi: 10.1111/papr.12776. Epub 2019 Mar 22.
Sleep macrostructure is commonly disturbed after surgery. Postoperative pain control remains challenging. Given the bidirectional interaction between sleep and pain, understanding the role of modulation of sleep during the perioperative period on postoperative pain is needed.
This was a systematic review. Controlled trials examining the effects of perioperative sleep-promoting pharmacological agents on postoperative pain and analgesic consumption were identified through a systematic search strategy utilizing multiple electronic databases.
Fourteen studies (9 melatonin, 5 zolpidem) involving 921 patients (melatonin n = 586, zolpidem n = 335) were included. Compared to placebo, melatonin reduced postoperative pain scores by ≥30% and significantly decreased opioid consumption in 3 studies (postoperative day [POD] 1-2), whereas 4 studies reported no significant effect of melatonin on postoperative pain. Compared to placebo, zolpidem reduced postoperative pain scores during POD1-7/POD1-14 in 2 studies, but only 1 trial suggested clinically meaningful improvement (ie, relative reduction of pain score ≥ 30%). Whereas 3 zolpidem trials showed no significant differences regarding postoperative pain ratings, zolpidem treatment was associated with decreased analgesic consumption in 4 out of 5 trials. Several limitations of the included studies were identified; only 1 study out of 14 was deemed to be at low risk of bias, and heterogeneity of the study design and outcome assessment precluded meta-analysis.
Perioperative addition of a sleep-promoting pharmacological agent may improve pain control, but underlying evidence is weak and results are inconsistent. Only 5 of the 14 studies objectively evaluated changes in sleep (polysomnography, 2 zolpidem studies; actigraphy, 3 melatonin studies), which complicates conclusions regarding links between perioperative sleep and pain.
手术后通常会扰乱睡眠结构。术后疼痛控制仍然具有挑战性。鉴于睡眠和疼痛之间存在双向相互作用,因此需要了解围手术期睡眠调节对术后疼痛的作用。
这是一项系统评价。通过系统搜索策略,利用多个电子数据库,确定了研究围手术期促进睡眠的药物对术后疼痛和镇痛药物消耗影响的对照试验。
纳入了 14 项研究(9 项 melatonin,5 项 zolpidem),涉及 921 例患者(melatonin n = 586,zolpidem n = 335)。与安慰剂相比,3 项研究(术后第 1-2 天)报告 melatonin 降低术后疼痛评分≥30%,并显著减少阿片类药物的消耗,而 4 项研究报告 melatonin 对术后疼痛无显著影响。与安慰剂相比,2 项研究报告 zolpidem 在术后第 1-7/1-14 天降低术后疼痛评分,但只有 1 项试验表明具有临床意义的改善(即疼痛评分相对降低≥30%)。虽然 3 项 zolpidem 试验在术后疼痛评分方面无显著差异,但 zolpidem 治疗与 5 项试验中的 4 项减少镇痛药物消耗相关。纳入的研究存在一些局限性;14 项研究中仅有 1 项被认为是低偏倚风险的,而研究设计和结果评估的异质性使得无法进行荟萃分析。
围手术期添加促进睡眠的药物可能改善疼痛控制,但基础证据薄弱,结果不一致。14 项研究中只有 5 项(2 项 zolpidem 研究进行了多导睡眠图评估;3 项 melatonin 研究进行了活动记录仪评估)客观评估了睡眠变化,这使得围手术期睡眠与疼痛之间的关联结论变得复杂。