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Pain Management Specialist Palliative Care Nurses
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Page 1: Pain Management Specialist Palliative Care Nurses.

Pain Management

Specialist Palliative Care Nurses

Page 2: Pain Management Specialist Palliative Care Nurses.

Learning Outcomes

• Define the different types of pain Describe the process of pain assessment

• Discuss pharmacological management of pain• Identify non pharmacological approaches for

pain management.

Page 3: Pain Management Specialist Palliative Care Nurses.

What is pain?

• Pain is an unpleasant sensory and emotional experience associated with actual or potential tissue damage

• ‘Pain is whatever the patient says it is and exists whenever he says it does’

• Pain assessment is essential in the management of pain.

Page 4: Pain Management Specialist Palliative Care Nurses.

Total Pain

• Physical - pain of the disease process• Psychological/Social –financial/body

image/family• Emotional -loss of independence/fear of death• Spiritual –low self esteem /dignity

Page 5: Pain Management Specialist Palliative Care Nurses.

Types of Pain

• Soft Tissue Throbbing/tender/ache• Oedema Heavy/tight• Nerve Throbbing/burning/toothache• Raised intracranial pressure Thumping

restricting• Bone Gnawing/aching• Colic Cramping/exhausting/gripping

Page 6: Pain Management Specialist Palliative Care Nurses.

Pain Assessment

• Location• Duration• What decreases pain• What increases pain• Intensity• How does the patient respond• Pain Tools

Page 7: Pain Management Specialist Palliative Care Nurses.

Pain Assessment Tools

• Visual analogue scale• Numerical Scale• Verbal rating scale• McGill pain questionnaire• Faces Pain Scale• Body Picture• Distat Tool

Page 8: Pain Management Specialist Palliative Care Nurses.

Principles in Managing Pain

• Right Drug by the Ladder

• Right dose by mouth/patch/injection

• Right Time by clock

Page 9: Pain Management Specialist Palliative Care Nurses.

WHO Analgesic LadderStep 3

Morphine 2.5-10 mg 4 hourly oral or other strong opiate (instead of codeine)

Step 2

Add codeine 30-60 mg6 hourly oral or other weak opioid

Step 1

Paracetamol 1 g. 6 hourly oral +/- other non-opiate

Adjuvant analgesic depending on the mechanism of the pain

Specific measures to moderate the cause of the pain – surgery, RT, physiotherapy, nerve blocks, TEN’s, stenting, chemotherapy, hormonal therapy, antibiotics, etc. Emotional, social and spiritual supportive care should be in place.

Page 10: Pain Management Specialist Palliative Care Nurses.

Step 1 Non Opiates +/- Adjuvant

• Paracetamol• Aspirin (rarely used in end of life)

Page 11: Pain Management Specialist Palliative Care Nurses.

Step 2 Weak opiates +/- Adjuvant

• Co Codamol• Codeine• Dihydrocodeine• Kapake• Tramodol• Nefopam• Buprenorphine patch

Page 12: Pain Management Specialist Palliative Care Nurses.

Step 3 Strong Opiates +/- Adjuvant

• Morphine I/R or S/R• Diamorphine I/R• Oxycodone I/R or S/R• Fentanyl Patch S/R• Buprenorphine patch• Actiq I/R• Methadone I/R but long half life• I/R immediate release S/R slow release

Page 13: Pain Management Specialist Palliative Care Nurses.

Adjuvant AnalgesicsDrug Class Type of Pain Drug names

Anticonvulsants Neuropathic

Lancinating pain

pregabalin, gabapentin, CBZ

Antidepressants Neuropathic

Burning pain

Amitriptyline, nortriptyline, duloxetine

Non steroidal anti-inflammatories

Swelling, bone pain, muscular pain

Ibuprofen, diclofenac, naproxen,

Muscle relaxants Muscle spasm diazepam, baclofen

Steroids Nerve compression, swelling, raised ICP

dexamethasone

Antispasmodics Colic, smooth muscle spasm

Hyoscine Butylbromide`, octreotide, loperamide

Bisphosphonates Bone Pain zolendronic acid

Anaesthetics Cancer pain, neuropathic pain

Nerve blocks, ketamine, intrathecal, lidocaine patches

Antibiotics Infection

Page 14: Pain Management Specialist Palliative Care Nurses.

Non Drug Pain Relief

• Heat• Cold• Relaxation• Divisional Therapy• Tens• Acupuncture• Radiotherapy• Immobilisation/aids

Page 15: Pain Management Specialist Palliative Care Nurses.

What factors increase or decrease pain?Increase Pain Decrease Pain

Insomnia, fatigue Sleep

Anxiety, fear Relaxation

Depression Elevation of mood

Social isolation Companionship, understanding

Discomfort Relief of other symptoms

Page 16: Pain Management Specialist Palliative Care Nurses.

Treatment according to pain physiology Noiciceptive Response to

OpioidFirst line Treatment

Muscle spasm e.g. cramp No BZD, Baclofen

Somatic e.g. Bone pain or Visceral e.g. Liver pain

+/- NSAID +/- Opioid

Neuropathic

Compression – peripheral or Central e.g. SCC

+/- Corticosteroid + Opioid

Injury – peripheral or CNS e.g. Nerve infiltration

+/- TCA +/- antiepileptic (NSAID + Opioid)

Page 17: Pain Management Specialist Palliative Care Nurses.

Drug Treatment

• WHO analgesic ladder – stepwise approach• Colic – Hyoscine butylbromide, mebeverine• Intracranial Pressure/SCC – steroid + analgesics• Bone pain – hot/cold packs, analgesics, treat

incident pain

Page 18: Pain Management Specialist Palliative Care Nurses.

Drug Treatment

• Muscle spasm – Massage/Relaxation, TENs, BZD

• Neuropathic Pain – amitriptyline starting from 10mg increasing to 75mg nocte or pregabalin from 25mg increasing to 600mg/day as tolerated, Duloxetine, Nortriptyline, lidocaine patch, clonazepam.

Page 19: Pain Management Specialist Palliative Care Nurses.

Clonazepam

• Licensed for epilepsy, myoclonus• Unlicensed- neuropathic pain, restless legs,

terminal restlessness• Caution – respiratory disease, renal/hepatic

impairment, low dose in elderly• Side Effects / Drug Interactions• Dose 125microgram on – 8mg daily

Page 20: Pain Management Specialist Palliative Care Nurses.

Breakthrough Cancer Pain (BTcP)

• Predictable pain e.g. dressing change, movement (walking, coughing)

• Unpredictable (spontaneous) pain e.g idiopathic no known cause

Page 21: Pain Management Specialist Palliative Care Nurses.

Treatment of BTcP

Correct the correctable

Non-drug

Drug Treatment

Page 22: Pain Management Specialist Palliative Care Nurses.

Possible Recommended Actions

• Advise patient on use of analgesics• Advise patient on non-drug treatments• Refer for psychological/spiritual support• Recommend change in analgesic/ review by

medical team

Page 23: Pain Management Specialist Palliative Care Nurses.

Fentanyl

• Fentanyl patches (brands: Durogesic D –Trans, Matrifen, Mezolar) matrix or reservoir

• Tablets: Sub lingual Abstral, Buccal Effentora• Lozenges: Actiq• Nasal spray: Instanyl, PecFent• Alfentanyl parenteral injections

Page 24: Pain Management Specialist Palliative Care Nurses.

Fentanyl Patches

• When patch is initiated it will take 12-18 hours for full absorption.

• If converting from SR alternative opiate, commence patch at the same time as last 12 hourly SR tablet is given.

• When patch strength is increased it will again need 12-18 hours for the medication to reach absorption.

• Patient may still require rescue doses of immediate release opiates.

• Levels peak at 24-72 hours

Page 25: Pain Management Specialist Palliative Care Nurses.

Risks associated with fentanyl

• Fentanyl is a strong opioid and should not be commenced on opioid naïve patients.

• It is a slow releasing opioid so there is risk of respiratory depression if not administered correctly.

• Direct heat can increase the absorption (heat pads, hot water bottle etc)

• Risk of abuse. • If administered by nurses record on a green card• Report incidents to Locality Manager

Page 26: Pain Management Specialist Palliative Care Nurses.
Page 27: Pain Management Specialist Palliative Care Nurses.
Page 28: Pain Management Specialist Palliative Care Nurses.

End of Life Scenario

• 60 year old lady diagnosed with lung cancer 6 months ago. PMH of ischaemic heart disease.

• Lives with husband.• Previous radiotherapy for spinal metastases, no

further treatment planned. For palliative care and symptom management.

• Back and shoulder pain have been managed fairly well on current medication.

Page 29: Pain Management Specialist Palliative Care Nurses.

Scenario cont:• Over the past few days her general condition has

started to deteriorate.• In the last 24 hours condition has deteriorated

further with escalating pain across her back and shoulder and increased anxiety, dyspnoea, respiratory secretions and nausea.

• She is starting to have difficulty swallowing medication. Taking no diet and very little fluid.

• How would you manage her symptoms ?

Page 30: Pain Management Specialist Palliative Care Nurses.

Current medication

Fentanyl 75mcg/hr patchOramorph 45mg prnPregabalin 200mg bdHaloperidol 1.5mg nocteLorazepam SL 0.5mg prnFurosemide 40mg dailyOmeprazole 20mg dailyBisoprolol 2.5mg dailySol. Aspirin 75mg daily

Page 31: Pain Management Specialist Palliative Care Nurses.

Conclusion

• Pain affects quality of life• Patients have the right to be pain free• Continual and effective assessment is essential

for successful pain management• Pharmacological and non pharmacological

methods should be used in treatment.• Correct medication for pain type

Page 32: Pain Management Specialist Palliative Care Nurses.

Further information

• NICE guidance on opioids for pain in palliative care • NICE guidance on neuropathic pain (2010)• PCF4 (2012) – www.palliativedrugs.com• Clinical Knowledge Summaries

http://www.cks.nhs.uk/palliative_cancer_care_pain/management

• Sheffield Palliative Care Formulary 3rd Edition