Download Pain Management

Survey
yes no Was this document useful for you?
   Thank you for your participation!

* Your assessment is very important for improving the work of artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project

Document related concepts
Transcript
“My arm hurts.”
Pain Management
Stephanie Kim PGY-3
Intern Bootcamp, July 2014
OUTLINE
•
Types of pain
•
Tylenol
•
NSAIDs
•
Opioids
•
Conversions
•
PCAs
•
Special situations
•
Anticonvulsants
•
Antidepressants
NEUROPATHIC PAIN
•caused
•eg.
by damage within nervous system
DM neuropathy, postherpetic neuralgia,
stroke
NEUROPATHIC PAIN:
TREATMENT
•
•
•
1st line:
•
Anticonvulsants: pregabalin, gabapentin
•
SNRIs: duloxetine, venlafaxine
•
TCAs: amitriptyline, nortriptyline (better SE profile)
2nd line:
•
weak opioids
•
opioids
Others: topical anesthetics (lidocaine patch)
NOCICEPTIVE PAIN
•
caused by stimuli threatening tissue damage
•
eg. musculoskeletal, inflammation,
mechanical/compressive
NOCICEPTIVE PAIN:
TREATMENT
•
•
Mild-Mod:
•
topical: lidocaine, capsaicin
•
inflammatory w/out RFs: NSAIDs + PPI
•
non-inflammatory or RFs for NSAIDs: tylenol
Severe/Refractory:
•
TCAs or SNRIs
•
Opioids
ACETAMINOPHEN
•
Initial Dose: 325-650mg q4-6h
•
Max: 4gm/day if short-term; 3gm/day in general
•
Considerations:
•
if increased risk of hepatotoxicity: 2gm/day max dose
•
don’t forget about IV tylenol, we can give 1gm q6h x 4
NSAIDs
•
General considerations:
•
synergy with opioids
•
AVOID in
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
renal insufficiency CrCl <60, increased age
heart failure, resistant hypertension
hepatic failure, cirrhosis
PUD, GIB
h/o platelet dysfunction, on aspirin
on anticoagulation
CAUTION with steroids
IBUPROFEN
•
Initial Dose: 400mg q4-6h
•
Max:
•
•
3200mg qd if acute
•
2400mg qd if chronic
Considerations:
•
200mg to 400mg comparable with 650mg tylenol
NAPROXEN
•
•
•
Dose:
•
naproxen base 200-500mg q12h
•
naproxen sodium 220-550mg q12h
Max:
•
base: 1250mg qd acute, 1000mg qd chronic
•
sodium: 1375mg qd acute, 1100mg qd chronic
Considerations:
•
naproxen sodium has more rapid onset than naproxen base
•
naproxen may have less CV toxicity than other NSAIDs
•
if rheumatologic d/o, 1500mg qd max
IV KETOROLAC
•
•
•
Initial dose:
•
if >65yo and >50kg: 15-30mg q6h
•
if >65yo or <50kg: 15mg q6h
Max:
•
if >65yo and >50kg: 120mg qd x 5 days
•
if <65yo or <50kg: 60mg qd x 5 days
Considerations:
•
used for short-term acute pain control
•
increased risk of gastropathy after 5 days
•
PO ketorolac has no advantage over other PO NSAIDs
•
not indication for chronic pain control
OPIOIDS
•
Properties of receptors
•
Mu1: supraspinal analgesia, bradycardia, sedation
•
Mu2: respiratory depression, euphoria, dependence
•
Delta: spinal analgesia, respiratory depression
•
Kappa: spinal analgesia, respiratory depression, sedation
OPIOIDS
•
•
•
General considerations:
•
in back pain, opioids vs placebo – no diff in pain scores
•
in neuropathic pain, opioids are 2nd line
Assessing risk:
•
HIGH RISK: personal or family history of EtOH/drugs
•
HIGH RISK: psych d/o
Things that mitigate risk:
•
poor performance status
•
restricted prognosis
PRINCIPLES OF USE
•
•
WHO Ladder: a stepwise approach
•
Mild pain: Tylenol, NSAID, +/- adjuvant
•
Moderate: Codeine/tramadol, +/- nonopioid, +/- adj
•
Severe: Opioid, +/- nonopioid, +/- adj
If chronic, may need a fixed dose schedule for opioids
•
•
50-75% long-acting, rest short-acting
DON’T FORGET A BOWEL REGIMEN
SIDE EFFECTS
•
N/V 2/2 activation of chemoreceptor trigger zone in medulla
•
delayed gastric emptying, constipation
•
hyperalgesia
•
narcotic bowel (hyperalgesia of gut – severe chronic abd pain)
•
sedation
•
respiratory depression
TRAMADOL
•
weak Mu agonist, reuptake inhibitor of NE and SE
•
Dose: 50-100mg q4-6h
•
Max: 300mg qd
•
Considerations:
•
not recommended in renal insufficiency
•
SE: seizure, worsening depression, SI
MORPHINE
IMMEDIATE RELEASE
•
Initial Dose:
•
2-5mg IV q2-4h
•
2-10mg SQ q3-4h
•
15-30mg PO q3-4h
EXTENDED RELEASE / MSCONTIN
•
Initial dose:
•
15mg PO q8-12h
AVOID IN RENAL FAILURE!
OXYCODONE
IMMEDIATE RELEASE
•
Initial dose:
•
5-15mg PO q4-6h
EXTENDED RELEASE / OXYCONTIN
•
Initial Dose:
•
10mg PO BID
HYDROMORPHONE
•
•
Initial Dose:
•
0.2-1mg IV q2-4h
•
0.2-1mg SQ q3-4h
•
2-8mg PO q3-4h
Considerations:
•
high potency
•
give for short-term acute pain
•
when PO route is not available
FENTANYL
•
•
Initial Dose:
•
12-25mcg TD q72h
•
25-50mg IV/SQ q1-2h
Considerations:
•
not recommended for acute pain
•
not recommended for opioid naive patients
•
IV infusions used in the ICU
caution
•
•
CODEINE
•
not recommended for chronic pain
•
dose-related side effects
•
polymorphic metabolism, multiple drug interactions
METHADONE
•
call Palliative Care
EXAMPLES
•
Mild-mod pain: schedule tylenol q6h, with oxycodone 5mg prn
•
Mod-sev pain:
•
if opioid-naive, start short-acting prn
•
eg. oxycodone 5mg q4h prn
•
if chronic pain, convert 50-75% of daily use to long-acting
•
eg. oxycodone ER 10mg BID, oxycodone IR 5mg q4h prn
•
if acute/or no PO route, IV morphine or dilaudid prn
TITRATION
50-100% increase
25-50% increase
25% increase
Mild pain
1-3/10
Severe pain
7-10/10
Moderate pain
4-6/10
Weinstein, Pain Presentation 10/2013
CONVERSION
Drug
PO/PR (mg)
IV/SC (mg)
Morphine
30
10
Oxycodone
20
n/a
Hydromorphone
7.5
1.5
Codeine
200
120
Hydrocodone
30
n/a
Fentanyl
n/a
Methadone
Complex
Weinstein, Pain Presentation 10/2013
MORE CONVERSION
Fentanyl patch conversion
•
1 mcg transdermal fentanyl = 2 mg oral morphine
•
Fentanyl 25 mcg/hr patch = 50 mg oral morphine/24 hrs
•
Fentanyl 100 mcq/hr patch = 200 mg oral morphine/24 hrs
•
Use caution in opioid-naïve patients
•
Titrate every 72 hours
Weinstein, Pain Presentation 10/2013
Starting a PCA
•
Demand
•
Lockout
•
Basal
•
Bolus prn: default in EMR
•
example: dilaudid 0.2mg demand with q6min lockout
Sickle Cell Crisis
•
in ED or Acute Care Clinic, pt will be given IV boluses
•
check to see if there is a Care Path in Portal
•
if not, and no other contradictions, start IVF and PCA
•
can augment with IV toradol if no renal insufficiency
•
transition to home PO regimen when pain controlled
End-of-life
•
opioids prescribed for pain and dyspnea
•
oxycodone and morphine oral liquid concentrate
•
can give q1h prn
•
morphine gtt for increased work of breathing at the end
•
•
start at 3mg/hr, have RN titrate to RR <20
•
may need to bolus until effective dose found
•
be careful with renal failure
don’t forget prn ativan, haldol, zofran, glycopyrrolate
ANTICONVULSANTS
GABAPENTIN
•
Dose: start a low dose 300mg qhs, uptitrate to TID
•
Max: 3600mg qd in 3 divided doses
•
studied in postherpetic neuralgia and DM neuropathy
PREGABALIN
•
•
Dose: start at 75mg BID
•
Max: 300mg qd in divided doses
•
studied in postherpetic neuralgia and DM neuropathy
•
used but less effective in central neuropathic pain, FM
Considerations: RENALLY DOSE, sedation
ANTIDEPRESSANTS
General Considerations
•
analgesic effects occur earlier (1 wk)
•
used at lower dose
•
TCAs and SNRIs
TCA
NORTRIPTYLINE
•
DOSE:10mg qd, max 75mg qd
•
SE:
•
•
anticholinergic: dry mouth, constipation, urinary retention
•
CV: arrhythmias, heart block, MI
•
GI: N/V, dyspepsia
•
Neuro: ataxia, tremors, sedation
Avoid in:
•
heart disease, conduction disturbances (prolonged QT)
•
GI dysfunction
SNRI
VENLAFAXINE
•
DOSE: 150-225mg qd
•
Used in DM neuropathy
•
Avoid in conduction abn
DULOXETINE
•
DOSE: 60mg qd
•
Used in DM neuropathy, FM, back pain, OA
•
Avoid in hepatic or renal insufficiency
THANKS
•
to Dr. Elizabeth Weinstein and Dr. Christine Koniaris
•
CONGRATS on making it to Block 1b!
•
EMAIL me @ stephanie.kim@uhhospitals.org