1. A comparison of multimodal perioperative analgesia to epidural pain management after gastric bypass surgery
- Author
-
Jocelyn M. Weiss, Heinrich Wurm, Roman Schumann, Scott A. Shikora, Daniel B. Carr, and Scott A. Strassels
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Adolescent ,Analgesic ,Gastric Bypass ,medicine.disease_cause ,law.invention ,Patient satisfaction ,Randomized controlled trial ,law ,medicine ,Humans ,Local anesthesia ,Anesthetics, Local ,Aged ,Pain Measurement ,Aged, 80 and over ,Pain, Postoperative ,Morphine ,Gastric bypass surgery ,business.industry ,Analgesia, Patient-Controlled ,Perioperative ,Middle Aged ,Bupivacaine ,Combined Modality Therapy ,Surgery ,Analgesia, Epidural ,Analgesics, Opioid ,Regimen ,Anesthesiology and Pain Medicine ,Treatment Outcome ,Anesthesia ,Infiltration analgesia ,Female ,Analgesia ,business - Abstract
We compared pain intensity, analgesic consumption, patient satisfaction, and length of stay in 114 patients undergoing gastric bypass surgery under general anesthesia. Patients were randomized to incisional local anesthetic infiltration plus postoperative patient-controlled analgesia (Group A), epidural anesthesia and analgesia (Group B), or postoperative patient-controlled analgesia (Group C). All received perioperative nonsteroidal antiinflammatory drugs. Age, sex, body mass index, length of stay, and patient satisfaction were equivalent in all groups. Pain at time 0 and 36 h was the smallest in Group B, greater in Group A, and greatest in Group C. Pain scores in a subset of Group A were lower at all times than in Groups B and C, but this difference was significant only at 0, 12, and 36 h. In responders, infiltration analgesia as part of a multimodal regimen offers a simple, safe, and inexpensive alternative to epidural pain control.
- Published
- 2003