Articles: analgesia.
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The analgesic effects of transcutaneous electrical nerve stimulation (TENS) and vibratory stimulation (VS), used both separately and simultaneously, were compared in 24 patients suffering from chronic pain. We tested the hypothesis that these combined procedures might improve the pain reducing effects obtained with a single type of stimulation, since they make it possible to recruit a larger number of large diameter afferents and/or to increase the discharge frequencies. Four 35-minute treatment sessions (VS, TENS, VS + TENS, Sham stimulation) were run with each patient. ⋯ The assessments took place immediately after any treatment (0h.), and again 4 hours and 24 hours later. The results showed that dual stimulation not only alleviated pain in more cases than either VS or TENS alone, but also had stronger and more long-lasting analgesic effects. On the other hand, all three types of stimulation used produced stronger analgesic effects than those obtained with the sham stimulation.
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Clin. Orthop. Relat. Res. · May 1991
Comparative StudyPostoperative infusional continuous regional analgesia. A technique for relief of postoperative pain following major extremity surgery.
A new technique using postoperative infusional continuous regional analgesia (PICRA) for postoperative pain relief was investigated in 23 surgical patients treated by amputation (12 patients) or by limb-salvage resection operations (11 patients). Bupivacaine was delivered into peripheral nerve sheaths via catheters placed therein at the time of surgery. Only patients in whom the nerves were easily accessible were treated. ⋯ Overall, the patients on PICRA had an 80% reduction of narcotic requirements when compared to the historical controls. The technique is reliable and can be performed by the surgeon, requiring about a ten-minute increase in operating time. It has potentially wide application in orthopedics in procedures in which the major nerves are easily accessible (e.g., pelvic fractures and revision hip surgery) and for patients with intractable pain of the extremities.
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The use of epidural fentanyl by patient-controlled analgesia (PCA) may be a useful method of providing high-quality postoperative analgesia on the general surgical ward. The successful use of this technique requires an infusion pump with specific characteristics. Three Provider 5500, newly-developed, battery-powered PCA pumps, were tested to determine their accuracy, threshold of occlusion alarm limits and stored volume characteristics. ⋯ This problem did not occur with the addition of an epidural catheter and filter. This device has features which make it suitable for the safe delivery of epidural PCA. Care, however, needs to be taken on changing cartridges to prevent accidental administration of a drug bolus to the patient.
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Seven PCA infusion pumps from seven manufacturers were evaluated. The condition for acceptable use of most of the units is that they not be used at low volumes that could result in overinfusion from the stored volume when an occlusion is cleared. All pumps met most accuracy, electrical safety, and performance criteria. Purchasing decisions should also take into consideration the cost of disposables, application, and medication security.