Cochrane在CORR®:围手术期静脉注射氯胺酮治疗成人急性术后疼痛。

Seper Ekhtiari, M. Bhandari
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引用次数: 6

摘要

自2000年以来,美国因阿片类药物过量而死亡的人数和阿片类药物处方的数量都翻了两番[3,4]。在美国,骨科医生是仅次于家庭医生和内科医生的第三大阿片类药物开处方者[9]。绝大多数手术患者在围手术期接受阿片类药物治疗,包括许多患者一生中第一次接受阿片类药物治疗[4],正是在这一时期,患者有发生阿片类药物依赖的风险。因此,多模式和阿片类药物减少或无阿片类药物围手术期疼痛管理的概念得到了重视[8]。事实上,《临床骨科及相关研究》最近的一篇社论提供了阿片类药物减少疼痛管理的适度方法,骨科医生应该考虑包括开更短时间的小处方,重新评估是否使用长效阿片类药物治疗麻醉性神经痛患者,并对手术后疼痛设定现实的期望[7]。已经提出并研究了几种阿片类药物的潜在替代品,如氯胺酮。氯胺酮是一种具有剂量依赖性的镇痛、遗忘和解离作用的药物[11]。然而,氯胺酮存在安全性问题,包括中枢神经系统症状,如幻觉[10]。在Cochrane综述中,作者调查了氯胺酮作为成人患者术后疼痛辅助治疗的有效性和安全性。作者纳入了130项盲法随机对照试验(8341名参与者),将氯胺酮与安慰剂、阿片类药物或非甾体抗炎药进行比较。总的来说,作者发现围手术期氯胺酮可以减轻手术后的疼痛、恶心、呕吐和阿片类药物的使用。
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Cochrane in CORR®: Perioperative Intravenous Ketamine for Acute Postoperative Pain in Adults.
The number of deaths in the United States from opioid overdose, and the number of opioid prescriptions, both have quadrupled since 2000 [3, 4]. After family doctors and internists, orthopaedic surgeons are the third-highest prescribers of opioids among physicians in the United States [9]. The vast majority of surgical patients receive opioids in the peri-operative period, including many for the first time in their lives [4], and it is during this time when patients are at risk for developing opioid dependence. Thus, the concept of multimodal and opioid-reduced or opioid-free perioperative pain management has gained prominence [8]. In fact, a recent editorial in Clinical Orthopaedics and Related Research offered modest approaches to opioid-reduced painmanagement that orthopaedic surgeons should consider including writing smaller prescriptions for shorter periods of time, reassessing whether to use long-acting opioid medications in narcotic-naı̈ve patients, and setting realistic expectations about pain after surgery [7]. Several potential alternatives to opioids have been proposed and investigated, such as ketamine. Ketamine is a medication that provides analgesic, amnestic, and dissociative effects in a dose-dependent manner [11]. There are, however, safety concerns with ketamine including central nervous system symptoms such as hallucinations [10]. In this Cochrane review, the authors investigate the efficacy and safety of ketamine as an adjunct for postoperative pain in adult patients. The authors included 130 blinded, randomized controlled trials (8341 participants) comparing ketamine to either placebo, an opioid medication, or a non-steroidal anti-inflammatory. Overall, the authors found that peri-operative ketamine reduces pain, nausea, vomiting, and the use of opioids after surgery.
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