Chapter 35 Chronic Pain after Surgery Flashcards

KEY POINTS 1. Chronic pain after surgery is common. 2. Risk factors include patients with preexisting pain, psychosocial factors, age, gender, and possibly genetic susceptibility. 3. CPSP can be prevented using good surgical technique (avoiding nerve damage and using minimally invasive techniques) and aggressive multimodal analgesia starting immediately prior to surgery. 4. Future strategies should include more consistent use of multimodal analgesia across surgical populations and screenin

1
Q

chronic pain after surgery definition

A

The pain should have developed after a surgical
procedure.
2. The pain should be of at least 2 months duration.
3. Other causes of the pain should be excluded, such as
recurrence of malignancy or infection.
4. The possibility that the pain is continuing from a
preexisting problem should be explored and exclusion
attempted.

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2
Q

Factors Associated with Development of Chronic Pain after Surgery
Preoperative Factors

A

Moderate–severe pain of >1 mo duration
Repeat surgery
Psychological factors

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3
Q

Factors Associated with Development of Chronic Pain after Surgery
Intraoperative Factors

A

Surgical approach with risk of nerve injury
Nonlaparoscopic technique
Surgery in low-volume center

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4
Q

Factors Associated with Development of Chronic Pain after Surgery
Postoperative Factors

A

Moderate–severe acute pain
Neurotoxic chemotherapy
Radiation therapy to site

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5
Q

A consistent factor associated with development of acute

and CPSP across many types of surgery is the presence

A

of preoperative pain. The
presence of preoperative pain is a risk factor for the development of early acute postoperative pain, pain in the
days, weeks, and months following surgery.

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6
Q

independent predictors of severe pain

A

preoperative pain, female gender, younger age,

incision size, and type of surgery

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7
Q

A very consistent factor in the

development of CPSP is the presence of

A

either severe preoperative pain, postoperative pain, or both.

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8
Q

Several factors may explain the consistent relationship
of preoperative and severe acute postoperative pain predicting
CPSP, including the following:

A
  1. Preoperative opioid tolerance leading to underestimation and underdosing of postoperative opioid analgesics.
  2. Intraoperative nerve damage and the associated
    CNS changes such a central sensitization and “wind-up.”
  3. Sensitization of pain nociceptors in the surgical
    field.
  4. Postoperative ectopic activity in injured primary
    afferents and collateral sprouting from intact nociceptive Ad-afferents neighboring the area supplied
    by injured afferents.
  5. Central sensitization induced by the surgery and
    maintained by further input from the surgical site
    during the healing process.
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9
Q

Several factors may explain the consistent relationship
of preoperative and severe acute postoperative pain predicting
CPSP,7 including the following:

A
  1. Structural changes in the CNS (plasticity) induced by nociceptive inputs with
    consequent reduction in normal inhibitory control
    systems leading to “centralization” of pain
    and development of pain memories.
  2. Heretofore unidentified pain genes that may confer
    increased risk of developing both severe acute
    and chronic postsurgical pain.
  3. Psychological and emotional factors such as emotional numbing and catastrophizing
  4. Social and environmental factors such as solicitous
    responding from significant others and social support
  5. Response bias over time—that is, some individuals
    have a tendency to report more pain than other
    individuals.
  6. Publication bias in which findings of a significant
    relationship between pain before and after surgery
    are published, whereas negative findings are rejected
    and do not get published.
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10
Q

psychosocial predictors of chronic postsurgical

pain

A

increased preoperative
anxiety, an introverted personality, less catastrophizing, social support and solicitous responding in the week after amputation, higher emotional numbing scores at 6 and 12 months, fear of surgery, and “psychic vulnerability

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11
Q

Pain catastrophizing

A

relates to unrealistic beliefs that
the current situation will lead to the worst possible pain
outcome.

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12
Q

Solicitous responding

A

refers to the behaviors on the
part of spouses or significant others who unwittingly
reinforce patients’ negative behaviors and thereby increase
their frequency of occurrence

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13
Q

Three main surgical factors have a possible influence on

the incidence of CPSP

A

Experience of the surgeon
Avoidance of intraoperative nerve injury.
Use of minimally invasive surgical techniques where possible

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14
Q

Many CPSP syndromes occur following

surgery around significant nerve structures Examples

A

pain after inguinal hernia repair (ilioinguinal and iliohypogastric nerves), axillary dissection (intercostobrachial nerve), and post-thoracotomy pain (intercostal nerves).

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15
Q

When a nerve is injured

A

it emits a long-lasting, high frequency burst of activity. This activity is transmitted to the central nervous system where the massive excitatory
stimulus activates postsynaptic NMDA receptors, leading to
excitotoxic destruction of inhibitory interneurons,18 disinhibition
of pain pathways, and increased postoperative pain

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16
Q

“preemptive

preoperative analgesia

A

would block central
sensitization caused by surgical insult and thus reduce
the severity of acute postoperative pain.

17
Q

preventive analgesia

A

Preventive analgesia refers to the attempt block nociceptive input through the application of several analgesic agents acting at different sites (multimodal analgesia) starting prior to surgery and continuing for several hours or days following surgery. A successful
preventive analgesic intervention would reduce or ablate pain for hours, days, or weeks following surgery and well beyond the duration of action of the initial analgesic
intervention

18
Q

NMDA receptor

antagonists in the prevention of pain following surgery

A

ketamine and dextromethorphan

memantine.

19
Q

gabapentin and pregabalin

A

bind to the a2d unit of
the calcium channel and are useful components of multimodal analgesia, producing opioid sparing effects and reducing the severity of acute postoperative pain

20
Q

providing effective

acute pain control is best performed using

A

multimodal analgesic techniques, including local anesthetics, opioids, and other agents such as NMDA receptor antagonists and/ or gabapentin and associated drugs