Articles: opioid-analgesics.
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Overprescription of opioids after surgical procedures is recognized as an important contributor to opioid misuse. Dialysis access procedures are commonly performed outpatient operations with few data or guidelines to inform prescription pain management practices. We sought to characterize opioid pain medication use after dialysis access surgery to promote a conservative approach to postoperative opioid prescriptions. ⋯ This investigation of opioid use after surgical dialysis access procedures suggests that most patients use relatively few opioid pills after surgery, which translates into overprescription and leftover medication for >50% of patients. A conservative approach to postoperative prescription guidelines using lower prescription quantities would encourage opioid-related risk reduction while providing adequate postoperative analgesia. Recommended quantities for postoperative prescriptions were generated using the 80th percentile consumed and were 0 to 6 pills for brachiobasilic or brachiocephalic fistulas, 0 to 5 pills for basilic vein transposition, 0 to 5 pills for radiocephalic AVF, 0 to 15 pills for upper arm grafts, and 0 to 10 pills for PD catheter placement.
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Best Pract Res Clin Anaesthesiol · Sep 2020
ReviewThe utilization of buprenorphine in chronic pain.
Reclassification of chronic pain as a disease may be helpful because patients with chronic pain require significant treatment and rehabilitation with a clear diagnosis. This can help address critical factors including suffering, quality of life, participation, and with family and social life, which continue to become more important in evaluating the quality of the health care we give our patients today. During the past decade of the opioid epidemic, methadone was the primary treatment for opioid addiction until buprenorphine was approved. ⋯ Expanded out-patient prescribing options have allowed physician and physician extenders such as physician assistants and nurse practitioners to treat these patients that otherwise would have been required to utilize methadone. With unique pharmacological properties, buprenorphine is a safe and effective analgesic for chronic pain. The literature for buprenorphine shows great potential for its utilization in the treatment of chronic pain.
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Randomized Controlled Trial
Effect of Opioid Versus Non-Opioid Analgesia on Surgical Pleth Index and Biomarkers of Surgical Stress During Neurosurgery for Brain Tumors: Preliminary Findings.
Stress response to surgery is mediated by the sympathetic nervous system and manifests as changes in hemodynamic and neuroendocrine parameters. Recently, the surgical pleth index (SPI) is employed for objective and continuous monitoring of nociceptive response during surgery. Opioids are the mainstay of managing stress response to nociception during the perioperative period. However, due to the well-known adverse effects of opioids, α2 agonists are increasingly used to ablate stress response and reduce opioid usage. ⋯ The stress response to surgery during craniotomy for brain tumors is similar with opioid (fentanyl) and non-opioid (dexmedetomidine) analgesia as assessed by SPI and blood markers such as cortisol, glucose, and pH.
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To measure the variability in discharge opioid prescription practices for children discharged from the emergency department (ED) with a long-bone fracture. ⋯ For children with a long-bone fracture, discharge opioid prescription varied widely by ED site of care. In addition, black patients, Hispanic patients, and patients with government insurance were less likely to be prescribed opioids. This variability in opioid prescribing was not accounted for by patient- or injury-related factors that are associated with increased pain. Therefore, opioid prescribing may be modifiable, but evidence to support improved outcomes with specific treatment regimens is lacking.