Articles: pain-management.
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Management of pain from traumatic rib injury is very challenging. Both acute and chronic pain caused by rib injury can cause significant morbidity (pain-induced hypoventilation, pneumonia, respiratory failure) and functional hindrance. Traditional pain management strategies in the emergency department (ED) that target acute traumatic rib pain are limited by the side effects of medications or the temporary half-life of anesthetics used for a nerve block. Both treatment modalities fall short of addressing subsequent chronic sequelae. ⋯ We present the first-time use of cryoneurolysis on an ED patient for the treatment of 10/10 severe traumatic intercostal neuralgia that resulted in the patient being discharged home pain free. The patient initially underwent a multilevel left-sided T5-T7 intercostal nerve block, followed by ultrasound-guided percutaneous cryoneurolysis of those intercostal nerves using two cycles of 2 min of cooling to a temperature of -70°C (nitrous oxide), with 30 s of thawing in between. The patient experienced 100% pain relief immediately post procedure that was sustained. He remained completely symptom free more than 6 months after the bedside procedure and returned to sports without restrictions. Why Should an Emergency Physician Be Aware of This? This case highlights the benefits of cross-departmental collaboration between the ED, Anesthesia, and Pain Management. We hope this model of multidisciplinary pain modulation can be replicated for other patients with similar pain and can herald a new paradigm of pain management in the ED.
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Anasthesiol Intensivmed Notfallmed Schmerzther · Sep 2022
[Perioperative Pain Management in Children].
Acute pain therapy in children is highly complex. Already preoperatively, the course for a successful therapy is set in the interaction with the child and parents. The goal of the treatment is a satisfied child. ⋯ Non-opioids and adjuvants - individually or in combination - have an established place in perioperative pain management. Non-pharmacological interventions can reduce anxiety and pain. Anxiety is one of the risk factors for chronic postsurgical pain.
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Given the public health toll exacted by the Opioid Crisis, it is important for providers in all disciplines to examine their opioid prescribing patterns to see where opioid reduction strategies can be effectively employed. Limiting the impact of the Opioid Crisis on active duty service members is a critical component of maintaining a ready fighting force. One avenue for reducing the potential for opioid diversion and abuse is developing and implementing non-opioid postsurgical pain management strategies that both provide adequate pain relief and also ensure an expedient return to full duty. ⋯ This change was accompanied by a concerted education effort aimed at both providers and patients on the benefits of avoiding opioids as well as the importance of strict adherence to a standardized medication dosing regimen for efficacious non-opioid pain control consisting of maximum doses of ibuprofen and acetaminophen taken every six hours. No increase in convalescent time off and no increase in postoperative visits related to pain control were noted. In our experience, eliminating routine post-procedure opioids for dentoalveolar surgery was a viable strategy for reducing the potential for opioid diversion and abuse among our patients with no negative impact on the operational and training tempo of the associated command.