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Opioid-Free Anesthesia and Analgesic Quality During the Postoperative Period of Oncological Breast Surgery
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<i>Background: </i>Pain is one of the most common symptoms in cancer patients. We can understand it as a multifactorial phenomenon. Breast cancer surgical treatment generates real damage to the structures and activates nociception which can generate persistent pain. Current anesthetic management is based on the use of opioids, which generate a large number of complications that can severely affect this group of patients, increasing morbidity and mortality. Opioid-free techniques have been shown to reduce complications and generate optimal anesthetic-analgesic management as well as decrease postoperative misuse. The purpose of this research is to compare both approaches and evaluate their impact on this population group. <i>Methods: </i>Simple, prospective, randomized, controlled blind clinical trial in 30 patients undergoing oncological mammary quadrantectomy a. The patients were divided into two groups study, the first (group A) received balanced general anesthesia with opioids as an analgesic strategy, the other group (group B) received general anesthesia balanced opioid-free supplemented with a PECs II regional block and/or Serratus (BRILMA) according to the patient's sonoanatomy, and ketamine-lidocaine as adjuvant drugs. Analgesia was assessed using the numerical pain scale at 2, 4, and 6 o'clock. The severity and impact of pain on the daily performance of patients were measured using the Brief Pain Inventory (BPI) short form in combination with clinical examination, the presence of postoperative complications, the length of stay in hours and the need for rescue with opioids. <i>Results: </i>35% of the patients in group A required analgesic rescue with Tramadol to improve pain postoperative, while in group B only 10% needed it. 33% of the patients in group A completed their postoperative period with nausea and vomiting, while in the opioid-free group the percentage was only 1%. Referring to the length of hospital stay from surgery to discharge, group A was hospitalized for a period of 25 hours (SD=21.2), while group B was there for 15.2 hours (SD=8.7). <i>Conclusions:</i>. Use of opioid-free anesthesia along with adjuvant strategies (drugs and nerve blocks) represent a safe and effective anesthetic strategy related with a lower incidence of complications from the use of opioids in the postoperative period, a lower consumption of analgesic rescues, a decrease in the length of hospitalization and a greater degree of comfort for the patient. This protocol represents an alternative when it comes to providing good intra and postoperative conditions for such a susceptible group of patients.
Science Publishing Group
Title: Opioid-Free Anesthesia and Analgesic Quality During the Postoperative Period of Oncological Breast Surgery
Description:
<i>Background: </i>Pain is one of the most common symptoms in cancer patients.
We can understand it as a multifactorial phenomenon.
Breast cancer surgical treatment generates real damage to the structures and activates nociception which can generate persistent pain.
Current anesthetic management is based on the use of opioids, which generate a large number of complications that can severely affect this group of patients, increasing morbidity and mortality.
Opioid-free techniques have been shown to reduce complications and generate optimal anesthetic-analgesic management as well as decrease postoperative misuse.
The purpose of this research is to compare both approaches and evaluate their impact on this population group.
<i>Methods: </i>Simple, prospective, randomized, controlled blind clinical trial in 30 patients undergoing oncological mammary quadrantectomy a.
The patients were divided into two groups study, the first (group A) received balanced general anesthesia with opioids as an analgesic strategy, the other group (group B) received general anesthesia balanced opioid-free supplemented with a PECs II regional block and/or Serratus (BRILMA) according to the patient's sonoanatomy, and ketamine-lidocaine as adjuvant drugs.
Analgesia was assessed using the numerical pain scale at 2, 4, and 6 o'clock.
The severity and impact of pain on the daily performance of patients were measured using the Brief Pain Inventory (BPI) short form in combination with clinical examination, the presence of postoperative complications, the length of stay in hours and the need for rescue with opioids.
<i>Results: </i>35% of the patients in group A required analgesic rescue with Tramadol to improve pain postoperative, while in group B only 10% needed it.
33% of the patients in group A completed their postoperative period with nausea and vomiting, while in the opioid-free group the percentage was only 1%.
Referring to the length of hospital stay from surgery to discharge, group A was hospitalized for a period of 25 hours (SD=21.
2), while group B was there for 15.
2 hours (SD=8.
7).
<i>Conclusions:</i>.
Use of opioid-free anesthesia along with adjuvant strategies (drugs and nerve blocks) represent a safe and effective anesthetic strategy related with a lower incidence of complications from the use of opioids in the postoperative period, a lower consumption of analgesic rescues, a decrease in the length of hospitalization and a greater degree of comfort for the patient.
This protocol represents an alternative when it comes to providing good intra and postoperative conditions for such a susceptible group of patients.
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