Articles: postoperative-pain.
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Postoperative pain after total knee arthroplasty (TKA) is intense and remains an unsolved problem. Some studies show that perioperative, multimodal analgesia, including intravenous dexamethasone, can provide a better analgesic effect; however, the validity of studies has raised concerns and questions remain around the efficacy, dosing, and safety of dexamethasone in patients undergoing total knee arthroplasty. ⋯ Our results supported the addition of perioperative intravenous dexamethasone to multimodal analgesia in total knee arthroplasty to reduce postoperative pain, opioids consumption, and length of hospital stay. Current evidence did not support the superiority of repeated-dose dexamethasone over single-dose dexamethasone; thus, we recommended perioperative 8-10 mg intravenous dexamethasone to be used based on adequate basic analgesia; however, the results may have been affected by small sample sizes and heterogeneity.
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Anaesth Intensive Care · Mar 2022
How to close the gaps between evidence and practice for perioperative opioids.
Excellent resources are now available that distil the best evidence around opioid prescribing in the perioperative period, including the list of recommendations provided by the international multidisciplinary consensus statement on the prevention of opioid-related harm in adult surgical patients. While some of the recommendations have been widely accepted as an essential part of postoperative practice, others have had slow and variable adoption. ⋯ We must also remain mindful that while education is essential, it is on the lowest rung of implementation efficacy and, on its own, is a poor driver of behaviour change. Ongoing structural nudges and the use of local procedure-specific analgesic pathways will also be helpful in addressing the gap between evidence-based recommendations and practice.
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Observational Study
Identification of Preoperative Serum Metabolites Associated With Postoperative Opioid Consumption in Gastric Cancer Patients by Extreme Phenotype Sampling.
Postoperative pain increases patients' risk and opioids remain the main analgesics to relieve it. However, improper use of opioids causes many side effects and identification of suitable preoperative biomarkers that predict postoperative opioid consumption may aid clinicians in improving analgesic strategies for patients. The activity of metabolites modulates multiple phenotypes and can function as biomarkers for disease prediction and diagnosis. ⋯ Preoperative serum metabolites were associated with postoperative opioid consumption. Different efficiencies of histamine degradation may be one cause of the variable sensitivity of patients to acute pain and warrants further study.