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The use of intraoperative epidural or spinal analgesia modulates postoperative hyperalgesia and reduces residual pain after major abdominal surgery.
Acta Anaesthesiol Belg. 2006; 57(4):373-9.AA

Abstract

INTRODUCTION

The use of intraoperative multimodal analgesia has clearly improved postoperative pain control, mortality and morbidity after major surgical procedures. However, very few clinical trials have studied the longterm impact of intraoperative epidural or spinal analgesia on chronic postsurgical pain (CPSP) development. Even less studies have evaluated the modulatory effect of intraoperative neuraxial analgesia on objective changes (i.e. mechanical hyperalgesia) reflecting central sensitization.

METHODS

The present work compares general anesthesia alone (GA group) versus general anesthesia combined to either intraoperative epidural analgesia (EPID group: combination of bupicavaine, sufentanil and clonidine 1 microg/kg) or spinal analgesia (IT group: either bupivacaine or clonidine 300 microg) on the development of secondary mechanical hyperalgesia and the incidence of CPSP after major abdominal surgery. Data analyzed in the present work involve adult patients undergoing surgical resection of rectal adenocarcinoma who participated in three previously published randomized trials.

RESULTS

Intraoperative epidural and particularly spinal analgesia reduced both incidence (p < 0.05 between GA alone and spinal analgesia) and extent (area) of secondary mechanical hyperalgesia surrounding the wound at 48h and 72 h after surgery. The use of intraoperative epidural and spinal analgesia also reduced CPSP incidence. Postoperative area of mechanical hyperalgesia seems positively correlated with the incidence CPSP.

CONCLUSION

An effective intraoperative neuraxial block of nociceptive inputs from the wound using multimodal analgesia--specifically when involving spinal analgesics and antihyperalgesic drugs--contributes to prevent central sensitization and hence reduces CPSP after major abdominal procedures.

Authors+Show Affiliations

Department of Anesthesiology, St. Luc Hospital, av. Hippocrate 10-1821, 1200 Brussels, Belgium. lavandhomme@anes.ucl.ac.beNo affiliation info available

Pub Type(s)

Comparative Study
Journal Article
Randomized Controlled Trial

Language

eng

PubMed ID

17236639

Citation

Lavand'homme, P, and M De Kock. "The Use of Intraoperative Epidural or Spinal Analgesia Modulates Postoperative Hyperalgesia and Reduces Residual Pain After Major Abdominal Surgery." Acta Anaesthesiologica Belgica, vol. 57, no. 4, 2006, pp. 373-9.
Lavand'homme P, De Kock M. The use of intraoperative epidural or spinal analgesia modulates postoperative hyperalgesia and reduces residual pain after major abdominal surgery. Acta Anaesthesiol Belg. 2006;57(4):373-9.
Lavand'homme, P., & De Kock, M. (2006). The use of intraoperative epidural or spinal analgesia modulates postoperative hyperalgesia and reduces residual pain after major abdominal surgery. Acta Anaesthesiologica Belgica, 57(4), 373-9.
Lavand'homme P, De Kock M. The Use of Intraoperative Epidural or Spinal Analgesia Modulates Postoperative Hyperalgesia and Reduces Residual Pain After Major Abdominal Surgery. Acta Anaesthesiol Belg. 2006;57(4):373-9. PubMed PMID: 17236639.
* Article titles in AMA citation format should be in sentence-case
TY - JOUR T1 - The use of intraoperative epidural or spinal analgesia modulates postoperative hyperalgesia and reduces residual pain after major abdominal surgery. AU - Lavand'homme,P, AU - De Kock,M, PY - 2007/1/24/pubmed PY - 2007/3/16/medline PY - 2007/1/24/entrez SP - 373 EP - 9 JF - Acta anaesthesiologica Belgica JO - Acta Anaesthesiol Belg VL - 57 IS - 4 N2 - INTRODUCTION: The use of intraoperative multimodal analgesia has clearly improved postoperative pain control, mortality and morbidity after major surgical procedures. However, very few clinical trials have studied the longterm impact of intraoperative epidural or spinal analgesia on chronic postsurgical pain (CPSP) development. Even less studies have evaluated the modulatory effect of intraoperative neuraxial analgesia on objective changes (i.e. mechanical hyperalgesia) reflecting central sensitization. METHODS: The present work compares general anesthesia alone (GA group) versus general anesthesia combined to either intraoperative epidural analgesia (EPID group: combination of bupicavaine, sufentanil and clonidine 1 microg/kg) or spinal analgesia (IT group: either bupivacaine or clonidine 300 microg) on the development of secondary mechanical hyperalgesia and the incidence of CPSP after major abdominal surgery. Data analyzed in the present work involve adult patients undergoing surgical resection of rectal adenocarcinoma who participated in three previously published randomized trials. RESULTS: Intraoperative epidural and particularly spinal analgesia reduced both incidence (p < 0.05 between GA alone and spinal analgesia) and extent (area) of secondary mechanical hyperalgesia surrounding the wound at 48h and 72 h after surgery. The use of intraoperative epidural and spinal analgesia also reduced CPSP incidence. Postoperative area of mechanical hyperalgesia seems positively correlated with the incidence CPSP. CONCLUSION: An effective intraoperative neuraxial block of nociceptive inputs from the wound using multimodal analgesia--specifically when involving spinal analgesics and antihyperalgesic drugs--contributes to prevent central sensitization and hence reduces CPSP after major abdominal procedures. SN - 0001-5164 UR - https://www.unboundmedicine.com/medline/citation/17236639/The_use_of_intraoperative_epidural_or_spinal_analgesia_modulates_postoperative_hyperalgesia_and_reduces_residual_pain_after_major_abdominal_surgery_ DB - PRIME DP - Unbound Medicine ER -