Anaesthetics - Analgesia Flashcards
What is pain?
An unpleasant sensory/emotional experience associated w/ actual/potential tissue damage OR described in terms of such damage
How is pain transmitted?
A-delta fibres = sharp, immediate pain
C-fibres = slower onset, prolonged pain
Sensory impulses enter cord via dorsal root, ascend in dorsal post column/spinothalamic tract
What are the adverse effects of pain?
Multiple psychological effects
Catecholamine release
-vasoconstriction –> inc cardiac work/delayed healing
What is the WHO pain ladder?
Non opioid +/- adjuvant
Weak opioid +/- non-opioid +/- adjuvant
Strong opioid +/- non opioid +/- adjuvant
What is the MoA of Paracetamol?
Unknown
- acts similar to NSAIDs
- inhibits CNS prostaglandin synthesis
When is Paracetamol indicated?
Mild-mod pain
Pyrexia
What are the benefits of Paracetamol?
Good analgesic/antipyretic properties
Weak anti-inflame activity
Oral doses achieve PPC w/i 1hr
Side effects uncommon
What is the dose of Paracetamol?
1g PO/IV QDS
- max of 4g/day
- dose reduced in pts <50kg
- max of 3g/day if risk factors for hepatotoxicity
What is the MoA of NSAIDs?
Inhibition of COX enzymes (produce PGs/TXA2)
- COX-1 = expressed in most tissues, platelet aggregation, renal blood flow autoregulation, GI production
- COX-2 = induced in active inflame cells, sensitises nociceptors/afferent pain fibres
What are the benefits of NSAIDs?
Anti-inflammatory/analgesic effects
Weak antipyretic effect
When are NSAIDs indicated?
Inflammatory pain
What are the side effects of NSAIDs?
Inhibition of COX-2
- dyspepsia & gastric ulceration
- bronchospasm
- renal insufficiency
- cardiotoxicity
- dec platelet count
- skin reactions
What are the absolute contraindications to NSAIDs?
Severe heart failure
History of GI bleeds/ulceration
What are the cautions to NSAIDs?
Asthma
Elderly
Coagulopathies
Renal/hepatic/cardiac impairment
What are the doses of NSAIDs?
Ibuprofen 400mg QDS
- co-prescribe w/ NSAIDs
- can be oral/topical