Publication | Open Access
Optimising pain management protocols following cardiac surgery: A protocol for a national quality improvement study
28
Citations
18
References
2019
Year
Local Study LeadsPain TherapyAcute PainPain MedicineSurgeryPrimary CarePain ManagementCardiologyAnalgesicsCardiothoracic SurgeryHealth SciencesInterventional Pain MedicinePostoperative Pain ManagementPerioperative PainOutcomes ResearchPreoperative PainPain Management ProtocolsPain ResearchCardiac SurgeryPatient SafetyAnesthesiaMedicineEmergency MedicineAnesthesiology
Pain following cardiac surgery is a multifaceted phenomenon resulting from a number of mechanisms. High-levels of post-operative pain are associated with cardiovascular and respiratory complications and adequate pain management is crucial for enabling fast recovery. However, adequate pain control is complex, a challenge that stems from a combination of poor reporting of pain, significant variation amongst patients and the side-effects of strong, particularly opioid, analgesics. An initial audit at our hospital demonstrated high-levels of post-operative pain following cardiac surgery and a protocol was therefore devised by the anaesthetic department for cardiac surgical pain management. The protocol stratified patients into high- or low-risk of pain based on the presence of risk factors for pain and utilised a combination of pre-operative one-off dose of gabapentin, intra-operative opioid infusion and post-operative multimodal analgesia with paracetamol, weak and strong opioids. Additionally, patients at high-risk of pain also received patient controlled analgesia. Use of this protocol was associated with improved pain scores on the first three post-operative days. We have devised this study to test for reproducibility of the benefit experienced at our hospital at a larger multicentre level. After acquiring pre-existing post-operative pain management strategies through an initial survey, local study leads will undertake a baseline audit. Local study leads will then lead a 4-week period of protocol implementation. Trusts with official pain management protocols will be given the option to re-circulate their pre-existing protocols. Subsequently, pain scores during post-operative days 1-3 will be re-audited.
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