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Acute Appendicitis: Influence of Early Pain Relief on the Accuracy of Clinical and US Findings in the Decision to Operate—A Randomized Trial
109
Citations
13
References
1999
Year
Pain TherapyPain DisordersAcute PainPain MedicineEarly Pain ReliefSurgeryPain DiagnosisPain ManagementAcute AppendicitisOperative ManagementAcute Care SurgeryHealth Services ResearchHealth SciencesInterventional Pain MedicineMedical ImagingMorphine GroupMedicinePostoperative Pain ManagementPerioperative PainOutcomes ResearchPreoperative PainPain ResearchPatient SafetyUs FindingsAnesthesiaPerioperative MedicineTrauma PainEmergency MedicineAnesthesiologyVisual Analog Scale
PURPOSE: To determine the influence of early pain relief on the diagnostic performance of ultrasonography (US) and on the appropriateness of the surgical decision. MATERIALS AND METHODS: A prospective randomized, double-blind placebo-controlled trial with morphine was conducted. A visual analog scale was used to evaluate pain in 340 patients aged 16 years or older. US was performed with a standardized protocol. Diagnosis was confirmed at histologic analysis or, in the patients released without surgery, at follow-up. RESULTS: One hundred seventy-five patients were injected with morphine, and 165 were injected with the placebo. Pain relief was stronger in the morphine group. In the morphine group, US had lower (71.1%) sensitivity (difference, −9.5%; 95% CI, −18.5%, −0.5%) and higher (65.2%) specificity (difference, 11.4%; 95% CI, 1.0%, 21.8%). This group had also a higher positive predictive value (64.6%) and a lower negative predictive value (71.4%), but the differences between this group and the placebo group were not statistically significant. Among female patients, the decision to operate was appropriate more often in the morphine group (75.8%), but the difference between this group and the placebo group was not statistically significant (5.1%; 95% CI, −7.4%, 17.6%). In male patients and overall, opiate analgesia did not influence the appropriateness of the decision. The appropriateness to discharge patients without surgery was 100% in all groups. CONCLUSION: Morphine does not improve US-based diagnosis of appendicitis.
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