Current opinion in anaesthesiology
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Curr Opin Anaesthesiol · Oct 2019
ReviewPatient-reported outcome measures for acute and chronic pain: current knowledge and future directions.
During the past years, patient-reported outcomes (PROs) and patient-reported outcome measures (PROMs) have become of growing awareness and importance in medical research and practice. This review summarizes recent developments concerning PROs and PROMs related to pain in the acute postoperative as well as chronic settings and indicates gaps and challenges relevant for future research and clinical applications. ⋯ COSs of PRO and PROMs are crucial in the field of research to enhance the comparability of results and reducing outcome reporting bias. In clinical practice PROs and PROMs are important for allocation of treatment. Concerning the development and implementation of PROs and PROMs patients' perspective should be thoroughly considered. Relating to acute as well as chronic pain there are some attempts to create COSs of PROs and PROMs but validity and reliability for both are still missing.
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The clinical practice of anesthesia continues to evolve and grow toward increasing quality and safety while improving the patient and family perioperative experience. Within the realm of pediatric anesthesia, advances in regional anesthesia techniques are important part in this aim. ⋯ Large data sets have given clinical providers information into the practice of regional anesthesia. It has confirmed the safety of common regional anesthetic techniques in addition to providing guidance to improving outcomes for children.
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To explore the data for and against the use of the various components of multimodal analgesia in cranial neurosurgery. ⋯ Opioids are the mainstay for treating acute postcraniotomy pain but should be minimized. The evidence to support a multimodal approach is growing; neuroanesthesiologists and neurosurgeons should seek to incorporate multimodal analgesia into the perioperative care of craniotomy patients. Preoperative and postoperative gabapentin and acetaminophen, intraoperative dexmedetomidine, and scalp blocks over incisional infiltration have the most data for benefit, with good safety profiles. Further research is needed to define the safety, efficacy, and dosing parameters for NSAIDs including COX-2 inhibitors, methocarbamol, ketamine, and intravenous lidocaine in cranial neurosurgery.
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Curr Opin Anaesthesiol · Oct 2019
ReviewCan recent chronic pain techniques help with acute perioperative pain?
This article discussed how the knowledge and technique of a few chronic pain procedures benefited the perioperative clinicians in their care of patients receiving specific orthopaedic surgical procedures. ⋯ Despite the widespread use of regional anaesthesia and multimodal analgesia in the perioperative pain management, more than two-third of the patients reported severe postoperative pain. Therefore, other therapeutic strategies used in chronic pain management such as radiofrequency ablation and neuromodulation have been proposed to optimize acute postsurgical pain. The early experience with those techniques is encouraging, and more studies are required to explore the incorporation of these procedures in the perioperative care.
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Curr Opin Anaesthesiol · Oct 2019
ReviewEssential elements of an outpatient total joint replacement programme.
To summarize the safety and feasibility of outpatient total joint arthroplasty (TJA) from the perspectives of short-term complications, long-term functional outcomes, patient satisfaction and financial impact, and to provide evidence-based guidance on how to establish an outpatient TJA programme. ⋯ With a standardized clinical pathway, outpatient TJA can be safe and effective in a subset of patients. Essential components of a successful outpatient TJA programme include proper patient selection, preoperative patient/family education, perioperative multidisciplinary coordination and opioid-sparing analgesia, and early and effective postdischarge planning. More studies are needed to further assess and optimize this new care paradigm.