Abdominal Hysterectomy (& Wertheim) Clinical Trial
Official title:
The Management of Chronic Pain With Acetaminophen Four Times a Day
The investigators hypothesized that 1 mg of acetaminophen 4 times per day for 3 days prevent chronic pain in hysterectomy patients.
The most appropriate expression of the pain is "an unpleasant sensory and emotional
experience associated with actual or potential tissue damage, or described in terms of such
damage" (IASP,2008) (1). When pain lasts longer than 3 months or beyond the time when an
acute injury would be expected to have healed, the patient's presentation becomes more
complex, often, not surprisingly, with more psychological features. These include complaints
of poor or non-refreshing sleep, tiredness, depression and poor concentration. Pain at this
stage is often said to be "chronic" (2). Chronic pain is not only a common problem but also
a significant and increasing public health burden in virtually all developed countries (3).
Hysterectomy is one of the most common surgical procedures in women. Recent studies have
recognized that there is a 20-40% incidence of chronic post-surgical pain after hysterectomy
surgery (4)(5)(6). Effective pain management is an important component of postsurgical care.
Many patients, however, continue to experience inadequate pain relief (7) Despite all
analgesic strategies, in the postoperative periods 80% of patients still suffer from
moderate to severe pain (8).
The ideal analgesic has some properties like rapid and effective pain relief, minimal
adverse effects, and minimal impact on major organ systems or no interaction with other
pharmacologic agents. Opioids are still good choice for postoperative pain but has dose
dependent adverse effects and negative postoperative outcomes (9)(10). Nonopioid analgesics
are commonly used alone or as adjuncts to opioid-based analgesia to treat moderate to severe
pain. Perioperative administration of acetaminophen with nonsteroidal antiinflammatory drugs
(NSAIDs) has been advocated to provide "multimodal" or "balanced" analgesia that decreases
opioid dose requirements and may reduce associated adverse events while reducing
postsurgical pain intensity ( 9)(11). Acetaminophen is superior to the other analgesics
because of safety and analgesic profile. At the same time it has less contraindications and
drug interactions with the others. Acetaminophen act by selectively inhibiting the release
of prostaglandins within the central nervous system as well as having some peripheral
analgesic effect (12). Rarely overdose use can induce hepatoxicity (13).
While providing fast and significant pain relief as well as a significant morphine-sparing
effect,(14) (15). it is not associated with the increased incidence of nausea, vomiting, and
respiratory depression observed with opioids or the deleterious gastrointestinal,
hematologic, and renal effects associated with NSAIDs and cyclooxygenase (COX)-2 inhibitors
(16).
Several international guidelines (EULAR, ACR) and influential reviews recommend the use of
paracetamol as the first-line analgesic of choice for the management of chronic pain, as it
provides cost-effective analgesia without the risks associated with NSAID use, particularly
in the elderly. Based on currently available data, the use of alternative analgesics, such
as tramadol and opioids, either alone or in combination with paracetamol, is warranted in
those patients whose pain does not respond to nonnarcotic analgesics. While these
recommendations are based on a vast amount of clinical data, they do not account for
individual patient responses (17).
Paracetamol is rapidly absorbed from immediaterelease formulations, with maximum
concentrations in plasma typically occurring between 0.25 and 2.0 hours, and an onset of
action within about 30 minutes (18). Because the terminal elimination phase half-life of
paracetamol in plasma is short, in the region of 1.9-2.5 hours after a therapeutic dose,(19)
the recommended time between doses is 4-6 hours, resulting in a 4-times daily dosing
schedule.
The investigators hypothesised that postoperative treatment with paracetamol with repeated
doses of 1 g in comparison of placebo in hysterectomy patients with moderate or severe pain
would decrease analgesics consumption perioperatively and the incidence of chronic pain
associated with abdominal hysterectomy.
;
Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Safety/Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Double Blind (Caregiver, Investigator), Primary Purpose: Treatment
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