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Clinical Trial
. 1997 Dec;85(6):1317-21.
doi: 10.1097/00000539-199712000-00025.

Late-onset preemptive analgesia associated with preincisional large-dose alfentanil

Affiliations
Clinical Trial

Late-onset preemptive analgesia associated with preincisional large-dose alfentanil

M J Griffin et al. Anesth Analg. 1997 Dec.

Abstract

Few studies using systemic opioids have been adequately designed to demonstrate a preemptive effect. We investigated the preemptive effect of intraoperative large-dose intravenous (I.V.) opioids over a 72-h period after lower abdominal surgery. Thirty-eight ASA physical status I or II patients undergoing abdominal hysterectomy were studied in a prospective, randomized, double-blind design. Group PRE received alfentanil 70 microg/kg over 10 min before surgical incision; Group POST received alfentanil 70 microg/kg over 10 min after incision. Patients received no other intraoperative opioid. Pain was treated in the recovery room with 2-mg I.V. boluses of morphine and was subsequently managed via patient-controlled analgesia (PCA) using morphine sulfate. Visual analog scale pain scores at rest (VAS-R) and on movement (VAS-M) and PCA morphine consumption were recorded for 72 hours. VAS-M and VAS-R scores did not differ at any point, and morphine consumption was similar in both groups over the initial 48 h. Group PRE used significantly less morphine from 48 to 72 h postoperatively (P < 0.02). We conclude that presurgical incisional (i.e., compared with postincisional) large-dose opioid exposure results in a modest, late decrease in postoperative morphine consumption, with no clinical impact on early postoperative pain. Timing of the observed reduction coincides with maximal output of substances implicated in experimental hyperalgesia.

Implications: When given before surgical incision, alfentanil, a short-acting narcotic, was associated with a reduction in morphine requirements 48-72 h after surgery. Brief interventions may have a delayed and sustained impact on pain perception, possibly by reducing mechanisms of sensitization.

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