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KEY CONCEPTS IN ACUTE PAIN MANAGEMENT - 1 SURGERY RESIDENTS Dec. 18, 2007 John Penning MD FRCPC Director Acute Pain Service
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KEY CONCEPTS IN ACUTE PAIN MANAGEMENT - 1 SURGERY RESIDENTS Dec. 18, 2007

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KEY CONCEPTS IN ACUTE PAIN MANAGEMENT - 1 SURGERY RESIDENTS Dec. 18, 2007. John Penning MD FRCPC Director Acute Pain Service. Objectives. General Key Concepts The “real cost” of acute pain Multi-modal analgesia Discuss key concepts of each modality - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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Page 1: KEY CONCEPTS IN ACUTE PAIN MANAGEMENT -  1 SURGERY RESIDENTS    Dec. 18, 2007

KEY CONCEPTS IN ACUTE PAIN MANAGEMENT - 1SURGERY RESIDENTS Dec. 18, 2007

John Penning MD FRCPC

Director Acute Pain Service

Page 2: KEY CONCEPTS IN ACUTE PAIN MANAGEMENT -  1 SURGERY RESIDENTS    Dec. 18, 2007

Objectives

General Key Concepts– The “real cost” of acute pain– Multi-modal analgesia

Discuss key concepts of each modality– COX-inhibitor as foundational analgesic– Coxibs – “platelet sparing” cox-inhibitors– Tylenol # 3 has it’s limitations – Opioids – think outside the “box”– Tramacet – a “me too” drug? Or something

to new to add?

Page 3: KEY CONCEPTS IN ACUTE PAIN MANAGEMENT -  1 SURGERY RESIDENTS    Dec. 18, 2007

Consequences of poorly managed acute post-operative pain The Patient suffers

– CVS: MI, dysrhythmias– Resp: atelectasis, pneumonia– GI: ileus, anastamosis failure– Endocrine: “stress hormones”– Hypercoagulable state: DVT, PE– Impaired immunological state

• Infection, cancer, wound healing

– Psychological:• Anxiety, Depression, Fatigue

– Chronic Post-surgery/trauma Pain

Page 4: KEY CONCEPTS IN ACUTE PAIN MANAGEMENT -  1 SURGERY RESIDENTS    Dec. 18, 2007

Consequences of poorly managed acute post-operative pain The Hospital

– Increased costs $$$– Poor staff morale– Reputation/Standing in the Community, Nationally– Accreditation– Litigation

The Healthcare professional– Morale– Complaints to College– Litigation

Page 5: KEY CONCEPTS IN ACUTE PAIN MANAGEMENT -  1 SURGERY RESIDENTS    Dec. 18, 2007

Benefits of Optimal Acute Post-Operative Pain Management

The Hospital– Increased patient satisfaction– Increased staff morale– Compliance with national guidelines, accreditation

criteria

– Cost Savings• Earlier ambulation and enteral feeding• Decreased complications/ICU expenditures• Decreased Length of Stay

Page 6: KEY CONCEPTS IN ACUTE PAIN MANAGEMENT -  1 SURGERY RESIDENTS    Dec. 18, 2007

The New Challenges in Managing Acute Pain after Surgery and Trauma

Patients/Society more “aware” of their rights to have good pain control– We are being held accountable

Pressure from hospital to minimize length of stay– Control pain, limit S/E and complications

Page 7: KEY CONCEPTS IN ACUTE PAIN MANAGEMENT -  1 SURGERY RESIDENTS    Dec. 18, 2007

The New Challenges in Managing Acute Pain after Surgery and Trauma

The Opioid Tolerant Patient– The greatest change in practice/attitudes in

the last 10 years is the now wide spread acceptance of the use of opioids for CHRONIC NON-MALIGNANT PAIN

– Renders the “usual” standard “box” orders totally inadequate in these patients

Get an accurate Drug History– The Brief Pain Inventory – “BPI”

Page 8: KEY CONCEPTS IN ACUTE PAIN MANAGEMENT -  1 SURGERY RESIDENTS    Dec. 18, 2007

What is the “Best Way” to manage acute post-operative pain?

FIRST, DO NO HARMTherefore, the “best way” is a BALANCE

Patient Safety

Effective AnalgesicModalities

Page 9: KEY CONCEPTS IN ACUTE PAIN MANAGEMENT -  1 SURGERY RESIDENTS    Dec. 18, 2007

KEY POINTS “Emphasis is placed on the utilization of a

multimodal analgesic approach to maximize analgesia while minimizing side-effects.” – Transduction– Transmission– Modulation– Perception

There is as of yet no single silver bullet!!

Page 10: KEY CONCEPTS IN ACUTE PAIN MANAGEMENT -  1 SURGERY RESIDENTS    Dec. 18, 2007

Pain Pathways

Page 11: KEY CONCEPTS IN ACUTE PAIN MANAGEMENT -  1 SURGERY RESIDENTS    Dec. 18, 2007

Acute Pain Management Modalities Cyclo-oxygenase inhibitors

– Non-specific COX inhibitors(classical NSAIDs)– Selective COX-2 inhibitors, the “coxibs”– Acetaminophen is probably COX-3

Local anesthetics Opioids NMDA antagonists

– Ketamine, dextromethorphan Anti-convulsants

– Gabapentin, Pregabalin

Page 12: KEY CONCEPTS IN ACUTE PAIN MANAGEMENT -  1 SURGERY RESIDENTS    Dec. 18, 2007

Cell Membrane Phospholipids

Arachidonic Acid

Endoperoxides

Thromboxane

Prostaglandins Prostacyclin

Toxic Oxygen Radicals

Cyclo-oxygenaseCOX

Phospholipase

Tissue Trauma

Page 13: KEY CONCEPTS IN ACUTE PAIN MANAGEMENT -  1 SURGERY RESIDENTS    Dec. 18, 2007

Analgesia with Opioids alone The harder we “push” with single mode analgesia, the

greater the degree of side-effects

Analgesia

Side-effects

Page 14: KEY CONCEPTS IN ACUTE PAIN MANAGEMENT -  1 SURGERY RESIDENTS    Dec. 18, 2007

Multi-modal Analgesia “With the multimodal analgesic approach there is

additive or even synergistic analgesia, while the side-effects profiles are different and of small degree.”

Analgesia

Side-effects

Page 15: KEY CONCEPTS IN ACUTE PAIN MANAGEMENT -  1 SURGERY RESIDENTS    Dec. 18, 2007

Case Problem: Severe Respiratory Depression after Toradol?

Healthy 34 yr. patient c/o severe incisional pain in PACU after ovarian cystecomy

Received 200 g fentanyl with induction and 10 mg morphine during case

PCA morphine started in PACU, plus nurse supplements totaled 26 mg in 90 minutes

Still c/o pain, 30 mg Toradol IM given with some relief after 15 minutes, so patient sent to ward

60 minutes later found unresponsive, cyanotic, RR 4/min.

Page 16: KEY CONCEPTS IN ACUTE PAIN MANAGEMENT -  1 SURGERY RESIDENTS    Dec. 18, 2007

Case Problem: Severe Respiratory Depression after Toradol? Pharmacodynamic drug interaction between

morphine and NSAID– morphine’s respiratory depressant effect opposed

by the stimulatory effects of pain, busy PACU environment

– NSAID decreases pain, morphine’s effect unappossed

Gain control of acute pain with fast onset, short acting opioid(fentanyl)

Add NSAID adjunct early Monitor closely for sedation and respiratory

depression after pain is alleviated by any means

Page 17: KEY CONCEPTS IN ACUTE PAIN MANAGEMENT -  1 SURGERY RESIDENTS    Dec. 18, 2007

The problem with the “Little Pain – Little Gun”, “Big Pain – Big Gun” Approach

With opioids analgesic efficacy is limited by side-effects

“Optimal” analgesia is often difficult to titrate– 10 – fold variability in opioid dose:response for

analgesia– A dose of opioid that is inadequate for patient A

can lead to significant S/E or even death in patient B.

• Many patient factors add to the difficulty– Opioid tolerance, anxiety, obstructive sleep

apnea, sleep deprivation, concomitantly administered sedative drugs

Page 18: KEY CONCEPTS IN ACUTE PAIN MANAGEMENT -  1 SURGERY RESIDENTS    Dec. 18, 2007

The rationale for COX-Inhibitors in acute pain management

The problem with the “Little Pain – Little Gun, Big Pain – Big Gun Approach”

– Patient Safety!! If the “Big Gun” is failing due to dose limiting sedation/respiratory depression, the addition at that time of the “Little Gun” may kill the patient.

Page 19: KEY CONCEPTS IN ACUTE PAIN MANAGEMENT -  1 SURGERY RESIDENTS    Dec. 18, 2007

NSAID and Acetaminophen

CONCEPT # 1

The foundation of all acute pain Rx protocols. ”First on last off”

sole agent in mild /moderate pain Analgesic efficacy is limited inherently In contrast, with opioids efficacy is limited by S/E Opioids added as required opioid sparing effect 30-60 %

Page 20: KEY CONCEPTS IN ACUTE PAIN MANAGEMENT -  1 SURGERY RESIDENTS    Dec. 18, 2007

Mortality From NSAID-Induced GI Complications vs Other Diseases in US

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5

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15

20

25

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ea

ths

in

th

ou

sa

nd

s

Leukemia HIV NSAIDs-GI

MultipleMyeloma

Asthma CervialCancer

Cause of Deaths

Wolfe MM: NEJM 1999; 340: 1888-99

Page 21: KEY CONCEPTS IN ACUTE PAIN MANAGEMENT -  1 SURGERY RESIDENTS    Dec. 18, 2007

Penning’s Pessimistic Policy on Pain Pills Pick your “Poison” Pursuant to Patient

Profile

COX-inhibitors are potential killers

“in the long run”

Opioids are potential killers

“in the short run”

Page 22: KEY CONCEPTS IN ACUTE PAIN MANAGEMENT -  1 SURGERY RESIDENTS    Dec. 18, 2007

Cyclo-oxygenase inhibitors

Acetaminophen

NaproxenCelecoxib

Ketorolac

Rofecoxib

Page 23: KEY CONCEPTS IN ACUTE PAIN MANAGEMENT -  1 SURGERY RESIDENTS    Dec. 18, 2007

Cell Membrane Phospholipids

Arachidonic Acid

Phospholipase

Prostaglandins Prostaglandins

Gastric ProtectionPlatelet Hemostasis

Acute PainInflammationFever

COX-2 COX-1

Page 24: KEY CONCEPTS IN ACUTE PAIN MANAGEMENT -  1 SURGERY RESIDENTS    Dec. 18, 2007

Why a COX-2 inhibitor?

Equivalent analgesic efficacy with non-selective COX-inhibitors

No effects on platelets!

Better GI tolerability– Less dyspepsia, less N/V

Page 25: KEY CONCEPTS IN ACUTE PAIN MANAGEMENT -  1 SURGERY RESIDENTS    Dec. 18, 2007

Two hours before surgery associated with post-op pain

1. Celecoxib 400 mg PO If severe allergy to sulfa?

2. Naproxen 500 mg PO Contra-indications to NSAID

Acetaminophen 1000 mg PO

Page 26: KEY CONCEPTS IN ACUTE PAIN MANAGEMENT -  1 SURGERY RESIDENTS    Dec. 18, 2007

DrugSummary Relative Risk for Cardiovascular Event (95% CI)

Rofecoxib, ≤ 25 mg

1.33 (1.00 - 1.79)

Rofecoxib, > 25 mg

2.19 (1.64 - 2.91)

Celecoxib 1.06 (0.91 - 1.23)

Diclofenac 1.40 (1.16 - 1.70)

Naproxen 0.97 (0.87 - 1.07)

Piroxicam 1.06 (0.70 - 1.59)

Ibuprofen 1.07 (0.97 - 1.18)

Meloxicam 1.25 (1.00 - 1.55)

Indomethacin 1.30 (1.07 - 1.60)*CI indicates confidence interval.

Source: JAMA. Published online September 12, 2006 (McGettigan and Henry).

Page 27: KEY CONCEPTS IN ACUTE PAIN MANAGEMENT -  1 SURGERY RESIDENTS    Dec. 18, 2007

Contra-indications to Celecoxib/NSAIDs

Patients with the “ASA triad”– Risk of severe asthma, angioedema precipitated

with COX-inhibitor Renal insufficiency or risk there of

– especially if risk of hypovolemia periop– Vascular patients having aortic cross-clamp and/or

probable angiogram peri-operatively Poorly controlled hypertension

– Especially if pt. is on ACE inhibitor, potent loop diuretics

Page 28: KEY CONCEPTS IN ACUTE PAIN MANAGEMENT -  1 SURGERY RESIDENTS    Dec. 18, 2007

Contra-indications to Celecoxib/NSAIDs

Congestive heart failure

Active peptic ulcer disease

Risk of non-union in bone surgery or non-fusion in spine surgery– COX-1 proven a problem in high doses– COX-2? Proven OK for 5 days

Page 29: KEY CONCEPTS IN ACUTE PAIN MANAGEMENT -  1 SURGERY RESIDENTS    Dec. 18, 2007

Celecoxib and “sulfa allergy” Allergy to sulfa?? History, Please!

– Most allergies are bogus: N/V, diarrhea– A rash with sulfonamide anti-biotics? Celecoxib belongs to the “other” class of

sulfonamides: furosemide, glyberide, etc.

– Do not use celecoxib is history of anaphylaxis or severe cutaneous reaction (Steven-Johnson sydrome. etc.) with a sulfonamide

Page 30: KEY CONCEPTS IN ACUTE PAIN MANAGEMENT -  1 SURGERY RESIDENTS    Dec. 18, 2007

The Opioids

We have to stop trying to put every patient in the “analgesic dose box”

Meperidine 75 mg

IM Q4Hprn

Tylenol #31 – 2 PO

Q4H prn

Page 31: KEY CONCEPTS IN ACUTE PAIN MANAGEMENT -  1 SURGERY RESIDENTS    Dec. 18, 2007

OpioidsCONCEPT # 2

Pharmacokinetic + Pharmacodynamic

patient to patient variability results in 1000 %

variability in opioid dose requirements (standardized procedure, opioid naïve patient)

– opioid dosage must be individualized

– therefore, if parenteral therapy indicated, IV PCA much better suited to individual patient needs than IM/SC

Page 32: KEY CONCEPTS IN ACUTE PAIN MANAGEMENT -  1 SURGERY RESIDENTS    Dec. 18, 2007

Opioids *Cancer Pain Monograph (H&W, 1984)

CONCEPT # 3

Under utilization of high efficacy PO opioids

PO opioid equivalence of 10 mg morphine IM/SC *

Morphine 20 mg meperidine 200 mg

Hydromorphone 4 mg codeine 200 mg

oxycodone 10 mg

Page 33: KEY CONCEPTS IN ACUTE PAIN MANAGEMENT -  1 SURGERY RESIDENTS    Dec. 18, 2007

True or False? One opioid is just like any other, in terms

of analgesic efficacy and side-effects.

Page 34: KEY CONCEPTS IN ACUTE PAIN MANAGEMENT -  1 SURGERY RESIDENTS    Dec. 18, 2007

Opioids – Are they all the same?

Morphine Hydromorphone (dilaudid) Fentanyl

Oxycodone (parenteral n/a)

Meperidine (demerol)

Page 35: KEY CONCEPTS IN ACUTE PAIN MANAGEMENT -  1 SURGERY RESIDENTS    Dec. 18, 2007

Opioids – Do they all act the same?

Opioids work as analgesics by activating endogenous inhibitory pain modulating systems

Opioid receptors– Mu, Delta and Kappa– Large genetic variability in expression

Good choice in one patient may be poor choice in another– Analgesic efficacy – Side-effect profile

Page 36: KEY CONCEPTS IN ACUTE PAIN MANAGEMENT -  1 SURGERY RESIDENTS    Dec. 18, 2007
Page 37: KEY CONCEPTS IN ACUTE PAIN MANAGEMENT -  1 SURGERY RESIDENTS    Dec. 18, 2007

MorphineMeperidine

Fentanyl

Atropine

Bupivacaine

Page 38: KEY CONCEPTS IN ACUTE PAIN MANAGEMENT -  1 SURGERY RESIDENTS    Dec. 18, 2007

True or False? One opioid is just like any other, in terms

of analgesic efficacy and side-effects.

Answer. There is considerable variability between patients in response to different opioids.

Page 39: KEY CONCEPTS IN ACUTE PAIN MANAGEMENT -  1 SURGERY RESIDENTS    Dec. 18, 2007

True or False?

Meperidine should be eliminated from the hospital formulary?

Page 40: KEY CONCEPTS IN ACUTE PAIN MANAGEMENT -  1 SURGERY RESIDENTS    Dec. 18, 2007

Meperidine Pharmacology

Opioid agonist – Mu and some kappa NMDA antagonist (weak) Local anesthetic action – equipotent to

lidocaine SSRI (weak) Muscaric blockade – “atropine-like”

– Central anti-cholinergic effects often causes confusion in the elderly

Page 41: KEY CONCEPTS IN ACUTE PAIN MANAGEMENT -  1 SURGERY RESIDENTS    Dec. 18, 2007

Meperidine’s major problem Normeperidine

– The “ugly” metabolite• Neuroexcitatory: twitches, dilated pupils,

hallucinations, hyperactive DTR, seizures• Non-opioid receptor mediated, no tolerance• Half-life is 15 – 20 hours

N-demethylation

Page 42: KEY CONCEPTS IN ACUTE PAIN MANAGEMENT -  1 SURGERY RESIDENTS    Dec. 18, 2007

Meperidine and MAO Inhibitors

Meperidine blocks the neuronal re-uptake of serotonin, may result in serotonergic crisis in patients being treated with MAO inhibitors– Excitatory reaction with delirium, hyper or hypo

tension, hyperthermia, rigidity, seizures, coma, death

– Supportive management, ? Benzos, dopaminergics?

Page 43: KEY CONCEPTS IN ACUTE PAIN MANAGEMENT -  1 SURGERY RESIDENTS    Dec. 18, 2007

When to use Meperidine?

As a third line opioid when other choices have failed– Especially if patient has Hx of such

Less than 600 mg per day Short duration of 2 days or less Avoid in elderly or renal failure patients

May be useful in small IV doses to supplement other opioids– 25 mg IV Q1H prn

Page 44: KEY CONCEPTS IN ACUTE PAIN MANAGEMENT -  1 SURGERY RESIDENTS    Dec. 18, 2007

Who still uses Tylenol # 3 ?

WHY ??

Page 45: KEY CONCEPTS IN ACUTE PAIN MANAGEMENT -  1 SURGERY RESIDENTS    Dec. 18, 2007

Opioid Myths that still prevail!

Codeine is a “weak” opioid?

Codeine is inherently safer than the more potent opioids?

Page 46: KEY CONCEPTS IN ACUTE PAIN MANAGEMENT -  1 SURGERY RESIDENTS    Dec. 18, 2007
Page 47: KEY CONCEPTS IN ACUTE PAIN MANAGEMENT -  1 SURGERY RESIDENTS    Dec. 18, 2007

CODEINE – A drug whose time has come and gone?

N Engl J Med 351; 27 Dec. 30, 2004

Page 48: KEY CONCEPTS IN ACUTE PAIN MANAGEMENT -  1 SURGERY RESIDENTS    Dec. 18, 2007

Problems with Codeine

62 yr. male with CLL, presents with bilateral pneumonia.

Broncho-lavage revealed yeast– Anti-biotics: Ceftriaxone, clarithromycin,

voriconazole– Codeine 25 mg PO TID for cough

Page 49: KEY CONCEPTS IN ACUTE PAIN MANAGEMENT -  1 SURGERY RESIDENTS    Dec. 18, 2007

Problems with Codeine Day 4 became markedly sedated, pin-

point pupils and ABG reveals PaCO2 of 80 mmHg. Marked improvement with Naloxone.

What’s the expected morphine blood level?

Answer: 1 to 4 mcg/L This patient’s morphine blood level?

– 80 mcg/L

Page 50: KEY CONCEPTS IN ACUTE PAIN MANAGEMENT -  1 SURGERY RESIDENTS    Dec. 18, 2007

Codeine Metabolism in Normal Circumstances The major pathways convert codeine to

inactive metabolites– CYP3A4 pathway yields norcodeine– Glucuronidation

The minor pathway, about 10%, yields morphine– CYP2D6, essential for analgesic effect

60 mg Codeine PO – approx. 4 mg morphine SC

Variability! 60 mg PO Codeine yields potentially 0 to 60 mg parenteral morphine

Page 51: KEY CONCEPTS IN ACUTE PAIN MANAGEMENT -  1 SURGERY RESIDENTS    Dec. 18, 2007
Page 52: KEY CONCEPTS IN ACUTE PAIN MANAGEMENT -  1 SURGERY RESIDENTS    Dec. 18, 2007

GeneticVariability And drug interactions1% Finland

10% Greek30% East Africa

Page 53: KEY CONCEPTS IN ACUTE PAIN MANAGEMENT -  1 SURGERY RESIDENTS    Dec. 18, 2007
Page 54: KEY CONCEPTS IN ACUTE PAIN MANAGEMENT -  1 SURGERY RESIDENTS    Dec. 18, 2007
Page 55: KEY CONCEPTS IN ACUTE PAIN MANAGEMENT -  1 SURGERY RESIDENTS    Dec. 18, 2007

Potential Codeine Drug Interactions

Major pathway – CYP3A4– Inducers decrease codeine effect– Inhibitors increase codeine effect

Minor pathway - CYP2D6– Inducers increase codeine effect– Inhibitors decrease codeine effect

Page 56: KEY CONCEPTS IN ACUTE PAIN MANAGEMENT -  1 SURGERY RESIDENTS    Dec. 18, 2007

Inhibitors of CYP2D6

SSRIs (potent) especially PAXIL Cimetidine, Ranitidine Desipramine Propranolol Quinidine (potent) Viagra Many anti-biotics and chemo

Page 57: KEY CONCEPTS IN ACUTE PAIN MANAGEMENT -  1 SURGERY RESIDENTS    Dec. 18, 2007

Why not just go with Percocet?

Too potent for some patients– 5 mg oxycodone = 60 mg codeine

It too, may be a pro-drug?– Codeine is to Morphine as – Oxycodone is to ??

Oxymorphone– The jury is still out on this one

Page 58: KEY CONCEPTS IN ACUTE PAIN MANAGEMENT -  1 SURGERY RESIDENTS    Dec. 18, 2007
Page 59: KEY CONCEPTS IN ACUTE PAIN MANAGEMENT -  1 SURGERY RESIDENTS    Dec. 18, 2007

Instead of Tylenol # 3 ? Acetaminophen 650 mg PO Q4H

with Morphine 10 – 20 mg PO Q4H prn

OR

Dilaudid 2 – 4 mg PO Q4H prn

Newly available Tramacet 1 – 2 tabs PO Q4H prn

Page 60: KEY CONCEPTS IN ACUTE PAIN MANAGEMENT -  1 SURGERY RESIDENTS    Dec. 18, 2007

Opioids

Hydromorphine 1 – 4 mg PO/IM/IV Q4H prn

NOT!This represents up to 30 fold range in peak

effect in any given patient

1 mg PO ---- 4 mg IV bolus

homeopathic dose ---- potentially lethal

STOP

Page 61: KEY CONCEPTS IN ACUTE PAIN MANAGEMENT -  1 SURGERY RESIDENTS    Dec. 18, 2007

Opioids: Rational multi-route orders?

Foundation of Acetaminophen/NSAID

Morphine 5 - 10 mg PO Q4h prn Morphine 2.5 - 5 mg s.c. Q4h prn Morphine 1-2 mg IV bolus Q1h prn

Hydromorphone 1 - 2 mg PO Q4h prn Hydromorphone 0.5 – 1 mg s.c Q4h prn Hydromorphone 0.25 – 0.5 mg IV Q1h prn

Page 62: KEY CONCEPTS IN ACUTE PAIN MANAGEMENT -  1 SURGERY RESIDENTS    Dec. 18, 2007

Towards a better analgesic for acute pain High level of efficacy A good drug would have an inherent

multi-modal mechanism of action Very low risk of serious side-effects Low incidence of bothersome side-

effects Very limited abuse potential Affordability

Page 63: KEY CONCEPTS IN ACUTE PAIN MANAGEMENT -  1 SURGERY RESIDENTS    Dec. 18, 2007

TRAMADOL

Page 64: KEY CONCEPTS IN ACUTE PAIN MANAGEMENT -  1 SURGERY RESIDENTS    Dec. 18, 2007

What about Tramacet?

Combination drug, 325 mg of acetaminophen + 37.5 mg of tramadol

Ordered like T#3– 1 to 2 tabs Q4H prn

Efficacy limited by max dose for acetaminophen.

Opioids can be added as required!

Page 65: KEY CONCEPTS IN ACUTE PAIN MANAGEMENT -  1 SURGERY RESIDENTS    Dec. 18, 2007

Is Tramadol New? Just recently available in Canada, as

Tramacet Synthesized in 1962, available in Germany

since 1977, UK 94, US 95 where IV formulation is also available

Minimal risk of respiratory depression and abuse potential, never been a “scheduled” drug

Now #1 prescribed centrally acting analgesic worldwide > 50 million patients

Page 66: KEY CONCEPTS IN ACUTE PAIN MANAGEMENT -  1 SURGERY RESIDENTS    Dec. 18, 2007

Tramacet - How does it work?

Inherent multimodal action – 4 distinct mechanisms

1. acetaminophen2. Weak mu agonist – very weak opioid3. Augments endogenous inhibitory nociceptive

modulation via serotonin 4. and norepinephrine pathways

Page 67: KEY CONCEPTS IN ACUTE PAIN MANAGEMENT -  1 SURGERY RESIDENTS    Dec. 18, 2007
Page 68: KEY CONCEPTS IN ACUTE PAIN MANAGEMENT -  1 SURGERY RESIDENTS    Dec. 18, 2007

Advantages of Tramacet?

Tramadol’s “strength” lies in it’s “weakness” as an opioid– Poor Mu receptor affinity

Minimal opioid effect– Less constipation, faster return to normal

bowel function– Less N/V– No sig. respiratory depression– No sig. risk for abuse (not classified as

narcotic)

Page 69: KEY CONCEPTS IN ACUTE PAIN MANAGEMENT -  1 SURGERY RESIDENTS    Dec. 18, 2007

Advantages of Tramacet? Tramadol’s “strength” lies in it’s

“weakness” as an opioid– Poor Mu receptor affinity

Tramadol does not antagonize the action of classic mu agonists like morphine, dilaudid or fentanyl– Unlike the partial agonist/antagonists such as

Talwin, Nubain, Stadol

Other mu agonist may be added

Page 70: KEY CONCEPTS IN ACUTE PAIN MANAGEMENT -  1 SURGERY RESIDENTS    Dec. 18, 2007

Does Tramacet work?

Combination tramadol plus acetaminophen for postsurgical pain.

Adam B. Smith et al.The American Journal of Surgery2004; V187: 521 – 527.

1 tab of Tramacet = 1 tab T #3 – IN YOUR AVERAGE PATIENT !!

Page 71: KEY CONCEPTS IN ACUTE PAIN MANAGEMENT -  1 SURGERY RESIDENTS    Dec. 18, 2007

Tramacet Precautions Liver Toxicity

– Risk of acetaminophen dose exceeding recommended 4 gm/day in 70 kg patient, if patient inadvertently takes other acetaminophen products, especially OTC.

Risk of seizures, very rare– U.K. Safety Committee reports 1:7000– Most cases involving interaction with pro-

convulsant agents or large IV doses of tramadol– Risk taking tramadol similar to that with other

opioids– Product monograph lists as warning/precaution

Page 72: KEY CONCEPTS IN ACUTE PAIN MANAGEMENT -  1 SURGERY RESIDENTS    Dec. 18, 2007

Why combination analgesics are not a great idea

Acetaminophen-Induced Acute Liver Failure: Results of a USA Multicenter, Prospective Study. Hepatology, Vol. 42, No. 6, 2005. Larson et al.

22 centers, 662 cases ’98 – ’03. 50% cases due to acetaminophen 50% of acetaminophen cases inadvertent

Page 73: KEY CONCEPTS IN ACUTE PAIN MANAGEMENT -  1 SURGERY RESIDENTS    Dec. 18, 2007

Tramacet Precautions Serotonergic Syndrome

– Patients may be at risk if Tramacet is co-administered with other serotonin increasing drugs

• MAO inhibitors, SSRIs, meperidine

– Spectrum of severity• Mental changes: confusion, agitation• Automonic effects: fever, sweating, labile vitals• Motor effects: pyramidal rigidity, tremors• Supportive treatment

Page 74: KEY CONCEPTS IN ACUTE PAIN MANAGEMENT -  1 SURGERY RESIDENTS    Dec. 18, 2007

What about Codeine allergy? Is it safe to give Tramacet?

Product Monograph states: “Patients with a history of anaphylactoid reactions to codeine and other opioids may be at increased risk and therefore should not receive Tramacet.

Very cautious position, no evidence Morphine and it’s cousins much more likely to

be of concern in severe codeine allergy. DO A HISTORY! 99% of patient reported

codeine allergy are just S/E or MBE.

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CODEINE MORPHINE

OXYCODONE TRAMADOL

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Tramadol Fentanyl

Meperidine

Page 78: KEY CONCEPTS IN ACUTE PAIN MANAGEMENT -  1 SURGERY RESIDENTS    Dec. 18, 2007

Tramacet Cost? Hospital gets a deal. Price matched with T # 3.

Patient pays 62 cents per tab.

Dispensing fee $15.00 + 60 tabs = $52.00 vs. about $18.00 for T#3.

Discuss with patient?

Page 79: KEY CONCEPTS IN ACUTE PAIN MANAGEMENT -  1 SURGERY RESIDENTS    Dec. 18, 2007

Acute Pain Treatment for the Ambulatory Patient Pre-op: 2 hours before

– Celecoxib 400 mg or Ibuprofen 600 mg– Acetaminophen 975 mg or Tramacet 2 –3

Intra-op– Bupivacaine 0.5% epi, 0.5 ml/kg surgical wound

infiltration, pre-incision better Post-op

– Acetaminophen 650 – 975 mg Q6H– Ibuprofen 200 – 400 mg Q6H – Hydromorphone 1 or 2 mg tabs, 1 – 2 tabs Q3HOR– Ibuprofen or celecoxib/Tramacet/Hydromorphone

Page 80: KEY CONCEPTS IN ACUTE PAIN MANAGEMENT -  1 SURGERY RESIDENTS    Dec. 18, 2007

The Tramacet Titration Tree

A

A A

A

A

A A

A

A

TT

T T TT

T

T TD

D

Acetaminophen 325 mg

Tramacet

Dilaudid 2 mg

Page 81: KEY CONCEPTS IN ACUTE PAIN MANAGEMENT -  1 SURGERY RESIDENTS    Dec. 18, 2007

http://www.anzca.edu.au/publications/acutepain.pdf

The above web site has the entire document and is freely Available to download.

ACUTE PAIN MANAGEMENT:SCIENTIFIC EVIDENCE 2nd Edition June ‘05Australian and New Zealand College of AnaesthetistsAnd Faculty of Pain Medicine.

Page 82: KEY CONCEPTS IN ACUTE PAIN MANAGEMENT -  1 SURGERY RESIDENTS    Dec. 18, 2007

Opioid Conversions – Parenteral to Oral

and Equivalents (approx.)

Morphine 10 mg Morphine 20 mg

Hydromorphone 2 mg Hydro…. 4 mg

Meperidine 75 mg Meperidine 200 mg

Codeine 120 mg Codeine 200 mg

Oxycodone (n/a) Oxycodone 10 mg

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Opioid Conversions – Oral to Parenteral

and Equivalents (approx.)

Morphine 40 mg Morphine 10 mg

Hydromorphone 8 mg Hydro…. 2 mg

Meperidine 300 mg Meperid.. 75 mg

Codeine 300 mg Codeine 120 mg

Oxycodone 15 mg Oxycodone (n/a)