Journal of pain and symptom management
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J Pain Symptom Manage · Aug 1992
Case Reports Randomized Controlled Trial Clinical TrialSymptomatic benefit of supplemental oxygen in hypoxemic patients with terminal cancer: the use of the N of 1 randomized controlled trial.
The symptomatic effects of oxygen on the dyspnea of terminally ill cancer patients have not been clearly established. Therefore, the decision to administer oxygen is frequently made on an individual basis. We report on the use of N of 1 randomized clinical trial to compare the symptomatic benefit of respiratory failure due to terminal ovarian cancer. ⋯ In 4 cases the patient considered the difference between oxygen and air to be of "much importance," and in one case to be of "moderate importance." No significant treatment, period, or interaction between period and treatment was detected for the difference in the VAS. We conclude that oxygen was significantly better than air for symptomatic improvement in this patient. The N of 1 technique is a simple and reliable method for the assessment of individual patients' response to oxygen.
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J Pain Symptom Manage · Aug 1992
Comparative StudyChildren's venipuncture pain: influence of technical factors.
Several aspects of venipuncture technique were evaluated to assess their relationship to reported pain. Subjects were 514 children aged 5-17 who had venipuncture performed by a technician in a hospital outpatient laboratory. A research assistant timed the duration of venipuncture and then obtained visual analogue pain scores from the children following venipuncture. ⋯ The distribution of pain experienced by children was positively skewed and about one-third of children were above the mean pain score. From the results of this study, venipuncture pain can be recommended for the study of issues in children's pain. Further, the findings recommend the development and utilization of interventions to reduce children's venipuncture pain.
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Opioids (narcotic analgesics) are widely used in the practice of anesthesia for preanesthetic medication, systemic and spinal analgesia, supplementation of general anesthetic agents, and as primary anesthetics. The last use is particularly widespread for major surgical operations, especially those involving patients with cardiovascular disease. The use of opioids in anesthetic doses is based on the absence of cardiac depression by the opioids. ⋯ Although there is a very wide margin of safety, allowing administration of enormous doses intraoperatively when the patient's ventilation is supported mechanically, the disadvantage of using doses far in excess of the individual patient's need is a prolonged recovery from anesthesia with the risk of postoperative ventilatory depression. Titration of the dose can be facilitated by computer-controlled infusion pumps with the benefit that the recovery time from anesthetic doses can be appropriate for the individual patient and surgical procedure, and postoperative analgesia can be continued by patient-controlled analgesia, which is another example of computer-controlled opioid infusion. Although specific opioid antagonists are available, their use to antagonize residual anesthetic effects is potentially hazardous.