The intersection of harm reduction and postoperative care for an illicit fentanyl consumer after major surgery: A case report

S. Ladak, G. Sapisochin, P. Slepian, H. Clarke
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Abstract

ABSTRACT Background As Canada continues to address challenges related to the opioid crisis, individuals suffering from opioid use disorder (OUD) can be especially vulnerable to physical and psychological destabilization after surgery. Adopting a harm reduction approach postoperatively can be a success factor for safe recovery and satisfactory analgesia. Purpose We present the case of a 40-year-old patient (referred to as DC) with OUD using illicit fentanyl, heroin, and oxycodone preoperatively and admitted for an elective liver resection for steroid-induced hepatoma. Despite a preoperative anesthesia assessment and the initiation of a standard balanced multimodal analgesic regimen, suboptimal analgesia was evident in the first 24 h postoperatively. This lack of analgesic efficacy precipitated DC’s use of illicit self-injected intravenous (IV) opioid and significant emotional distress. To address this, a nurse practitioner and anesthesiologist within the Toronto General Hospital acute and transitional pain program and the surgical team quickly met and adopted a harm reduction approach to manage DC’s postoperative pain and emotional distress. The ultimate goal was to eliminate self-administration of illicit IV opioids and prevent DC from attempting to leave hospital against medical advice. Following an interprofessional team discussion that included DC, IV fentanyl was offered via a patient-controlled analgesia pump to DC’s satisfaction (exceeding standard settings), providing acceptable pain relief. To our knowledge, DC did not self-administer additional illicit drugs during the remainder of hospitalization. Outcome This harm reduction approach resulted in DC’s safe recovery, achievement of postoperative functional milestones, and continued engagement with outpatient pain treatment.
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非法芬太尼使用者大手术后减少伤害和术后护理的交叉点:一例病例报告
背景随着加拿大继续应对与阿片类药物危机相关的挑战,患有阿片类药物使用障碍(OUD)的个体在手术后特别容易受到身体和心理不稳定的影响。术后采取减少伤害的方法是安全恢复和令人满意的镇痛的成功因素。目的:我们报告一名40岁的患者(DC),术前使用非法芬太尼、海洛因和羟考酮进行OUD,并因类固醇性肝癌接受选择性肝切除术。尽管术前进行了麻醉评估,并开始了标准的平衡多模式镇痛方案,但术后24小时内明显出现了次优镇痛。这种镇痛效果的缺乏促使DC使用非法自注射静脉(IV)阿片类药物和显著的情绪困扰。为了解决这个问题,多伦多总医院急性和过渡性疼痛项目的执业护士和麻醉师以及手术团队迅速会面并采用了减少伤害的方法来管理DC的术后疼痛和情绪困扰。最终目标是消除非法静脉注射阿片类药物的自我管理,并防止DC不遵医嘱试图离开医院。经过包括DC在内的跨专业团队讨论,通过患者控制的镇痛泵给予静脉芬太尼,使DC满意(超过标准设置),提供可接受的疼痛缓解。据我们所知,DC在住院期间没有自行服用额外的非法药物。结果:这种减少伤害的方法导致DC安全恢复,实现术后功能里程碑,并继续参与门诊疼痛治疗。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
3.70
自引率
12.50%
发文量
36
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