Anaesthesia & intensive care medicine
Volume 9, Issue 1 , Pages 21-26, January 2008

Techniques of opioid administration

Dee Comerford, MSc, is Lead Specialist Nurse in Acute Pain Services at Singleton Hospital, Swansea NHS Trust. She qualified as an RGN at Morriston Hospital, Swansea, and worked in intensive care for 14 years before becoming Clinical Nurse Specialist in Pain Management in Carmarthenshire NHS Trust. She has an MSc in Pain Management from University Wales College of Medicine, Cardiff

Abstract 

Opioids continue to be the main pharmacological treatment for severe acute pain. Traditional methods of opioid administration (oral, intramuscular, subcutaneous) are more effective in managing pain if the treatment regimens are individualized and dosages are titrated to effect (pain relief). Oxycodone, an opioid agonist similar in potency to morphine, has proved useful as an oral step-down analgesic in the treatment of acute postoperative pain for a number of surgical procedures (orthopaedic, abdominal, gynaecological). It is also a valuable alternative opioid to morphine intravenous patient-controlled analgesia (IV PCA) in those patients who experience severe unpleasant side effects, such as nausea and hallucinations. Other PCA modalities available for opioid administration in the treatment of acute pain include epidural and transmucosal (intranasal, sublingual, buccal). Transdermal delivery of highly lipid-soluble opioids is available for the treatment of severe pain in chronic and palliative care. This passive drug delivery system is not suitable for the routine management of severe acute pain because rapid and reliable changes to the delivery rate are not possible. However, advances in transdermal delivery system technology have led to the development of a non-invasive PCA system for the management of acute postoperative pain, which utilizes the process of iontophoresis. The fentanyl HCI iontophoretic transdermal system (fentanyl ITS) has the potential to be a valuable modality in the future management of acute postoperative pain.

Keywords: acute pain, analgesia, patient-controlled analgesia, postoperative pain

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PII: S1472-0299(07)00261-5

doi:10.1016/j.mpaic.2007.10.005

Anaesthesia & intensive care medicine
Volume 9, Issue 1 , Pages 21-26, January 2008