Pain Clinical Trial
Official title:
Pre-operative Ketorolac Administration Has no Pre-emptive Analgesic Effect Following Total Abdominal Hysterectomy
Background: Experimental models using short duration noxious stimuli have led to the concept
of pre-emptive analgesia. Ketorolac, a non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drug (NSAID), has
been shown to have a post-operative narcotic sparing effect when given pre-operatively and
alternatively to not have this effect. This study was undertaken to determine whether a
single intravenous dose of ketorolac would result in decreased post-operative pain and
narcotic requirements.
Methods: In a double-blind, randomized controlled trial, 48 women undergoing abdominal
hysterectomy were studied. Patients in the ketorolac group received 30 mg of intravenous
ketorolac 30 minutes before surgical incision, while the control group received normal
saline. The post-operative analgesia was performed with a continuous infusion of tramadol at
12 mg/hour with the possibility of a 10 mg bolus every 10 minutes. Pain was assessed using
the Visual Analog Scale (VAS), tramadol consumption and hemodynamic parameters at 0, 1, 2,
4, 8, 12, 16 and 24 hours post-operatively. We quantified times to rescue analgesic
(morphine), adverse effects and patient satisfaction.
Damage to tissues has been shown to provoke a magnified reaction to noxious stimuli,
peripherally by diminishing the threshold of nociceptive afferent nerve terminals and
centrally by augmenting the excitability of second-order sensory neurons in the spinal cord;
later resulting in an amplification and extension of postoperative pain after surgery.
Hence, much research has focused on procedures to avoid these central neuroplastic changes
through the usage of preemptive analgesia.
Experimental models have conducted to the idea of 'preemptive analgesia' . The decrement of
afferent nociceptive inputs to the spinal cord using analgesic techniques started before the
initial painful stimulus avoids or attenuates the formation of spinal hyperexcitabilty and
avoids the transformed processing of afferent input, leading to less postoperative pain.
Whether such experimental models are applicable to the noxious circumstances occurring
during surgery is controversial.
Although preemptive analgesia with different agents have been successful in experimental
animals, conclusions from human studies remain in conflict. A diversity of agents have been
analyzed for their conceivable preemptive analgesic effects: local anesthetics,
non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs), paracetamol, opioids, magnesium, cytokine
synthesis inhibitors, ketamine, and tricyclic antidepressants.
Scientific research enabling an understanding of the molecular mechanisms of nociception has
disclosed a considerable function of cytokines and prostaglandins (PG). Hyperexcitability
also appears peripherally in nerve endings at the location of surgical tissue damage and is
mediated in part by prostaglandins. Evidence is accumulating that products of the
cyclooxygenase pathway may be engaged in the elaboration of central sensitization. Drugs
that block the formation of prostaglandins such as NSAIDs might therefore be assumed to
avoid or minimize the formation of this peripheral and central hyperexcitability. Their
central analgesic actions are effected by averting spinal prostaglandin synthesis and
attenuating liberation of neurotransmitters from the primary afferent terminals and spinal
interneurons.
Sporadic studies have established some considerable preemptive benefit of NSAIDs. As a
result, the objective of this study was to ascertain the impact of a NSAID, ketorolac, on
pain severity and analgesic requirement, in the early postoperative period.
Ketorolac is a nonselective NSAID that blocks cyclooxygenase 1 (COX-1) and cyclooxygenase 2
(COX-2) enzymes and as a result blocks the formation of prostaglandins attenuating the
sensitization procedures. The antinociceptive and anti-inflammatory action of NSAIDs may be
associated to the suppression of nitric oxide synthase activation, decreased generation of
proinflammatory cytokines, and lipoxine activation. Consequently, this multidirectional
activity indicates that there may be the probability of adjusting the nociception process by
the employment of these drugs perioperatively.
To our knowledge, no prior controlled study has determined the effectiveness of preoperative
intravenous ketorolac compared to placebo in patients who underwent abdominal
hysterectomies. Thus, this clinical trial was conceived to explore the postoperative
analgesic efficiency and opioid-sparing action of a single dose of intravenous ketorolac in
contrast with placebo administered preoperatively.
;
Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Double Blind (Subject, Caregiver, Investigator, Outcomes Assessor), Primary Purpose: Prevention
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