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Randomized controlled trial on preemptive analgesia for acute postoperative pain management in children

Authors
Song, In-KyungPark, Yong-HeeLee, Ji-HyunKim, Jin-TaeChoi, In HoKim, Hee-Soo
Issue Date
Apr-2016
Publisher
WILEY-BLACKWELL
Keywords
acute pain; children; patient-controlled analgesia; pediatrics; postoperative pain
Citation
PEDIATRIC ANESTHESIA, v.26, no.4, pp 438 - 443
Pages
6
Journal Title
PEDIATRIC ANESTHESIA
Volume
26
Number
4
Start Page
438
End Page
443
URI
https://scholarworks.bwise.kr/cau/handle/2019.sw.cau/7069
DOI
10.1111/pan.12864
ISSN
1155-5645
1460-9592
Abstract
BackgroundPreemptive analgesia is an anti-nociceptive treatment that starts before surgery and prevents the establishment of central sensitization. Whether preemptive analgesia is more effective than conventional regimens for managing postoperative pain remains controversial. This study evaluated the efficacy of intravenous preemptive analgesia for acute postoperative pain control in pediatric patients. MethodsIn this prospective randomized controlled trial, 51 children aged 3-7 years, scheduled for corrective osteotomy were randomized into control (group C) or preemptive (group P) group. Both groups received standardized general anesthesia, including intravenous patient-controlled analgesia (IV-PCA) with fentanyl, which was started before skin incision in group P or 5 min thereafter in group C. IV-PCA data, pain scores using verbal rating scale (VRS) and Wong-Baker FACES((R)) pain rating scale (WBFS), emergence agitation score (EAS) using the Pediatric Anesthesia Emergence Delirium (PAED) scale, analgesic requirements, and complications were recorded. ResultsThe primary outcome, pain score at postoperative 1 h, showed no difference between the groups. Both groups did not demonstrate emergence agitation (PAED cutoff value 12), although the EAS at admission to the postanesthetic care unit (PACU) was lower in group P than in group C (P = 0.002; mean difference 4.85, 95% CI 1.97-7.73). There were no differences in the delivered volume of IV-PCA, frequency of pushing the IV-PCA button, effective push attempts, VRS, WBFS, EAS at discharge from the PACU, additional analgesic requirements, and complications. ConclusionPreemptive analgesia using IV-PCA with fentanyl showed no significant advantages for postoperative analgesia after corrective osteotomy in pediatric patients.
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