Title: Dr Brian Stickle
1Acute Pain
Physiology And Pharmacology
- Dr Brian Stickle
- Consultant Anaesthetist
- Acute Pain Team
- Department of Anaesthesia
- ARI
2Contents
- Physiology of Pain
- Recap
- Pharmacology
- Opiates
- NSAIDs (inc paracetamol)
- Tramadol
- Multi-modal analgesia
- Routes of drug delivery
3Definition
Pain is an unpleasant sensory and emotional
experience associated with actual or potential
tissue damage or described in terms of such
damage.
- International Association for the Study of Pain
- Implies emotional component.
- Pain can exist without tissue damage.
4Acute Pain
- Nociceptive pain.
- Derived directly from pain receptors.
- Arises in damaged tissues.
- Sensed in damaged area.
- Has a cause which is of finite duration.
- Has a Purpose.
5Aetiology of Acute Pain 1
6Aetiology of Acute Pain 2
7Aetiology of Acute Pain 3
8Aetiology of Acute Pain 4
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10Peripheral Generation of Pain
- Tissue damage
- Increased blood vessel permeability
- Swelling / Oedema
- Vasodilation
- Redness
- Stimulated inflammatory process
- Immune response white cell activation
- Phagocytosis
- Sensitisation of nerve endings
- Tenderness
11Peripheral Generation of Pain
Tissue injury
Blood Vessel
Tissue
K
H
PGs, leukotrienes
Oedema
Plasma extravasation
Nerve terminal
Bradykinin
SP NKA CGRP
Mast cell
Spinal cord
Histamine
5HT
platelet
12Spinal ModulationGate Control Theory
opiate receptors
Central control
Gate control System
-
Fast fibres touch / pressure
Action System
T
PAIN
SG
-
Slow pain fibres
-
13Descending control
- Sensory System
- descending inhibitory systems
- stop pain transmission
- loss of inhibition pain
- transmission noradrenaline, 5HT
14Descending control
Midbrain
Periaqueductal grey
Locus coeruleus
Pons
Medulla
Raphe magnus
Spinal cord
5-HT
Noradrenaline
opiate receptors
15Analgesic Drugs
Nerve Endings
Peripheral Nerves
Plexuss
Nerve Roots
Cord
Brainstem
Brain
16NSAIDs
- Non Steroidal Anti-Inflammatory Drugs
- willow bark - salicin
- Cyclo-oxygenase inhibitors
- Sole therapy for mild/moderate pain
- Combination therapy as part of Multi-modal
analgesia
17COX inhibition and NSAIDs
Two Isoforms of Cyclo-oxygenase
Cyclo-oxygenase (COX)
COX - 1 Constitutive COX Lung, Gut, Kidney,
Platelets
COX - 2 Inducible COX All inflamed / damaged
tissues
- ? Most likely mechanism for NSAID-mediated
analgesia. - Selective COX-2 inhibitors should produce
analgesia with fewer adverse effects.
18NSAID Side effects
- Renal
- removes vasodilatory prostaglandins
- precipitate ARF in susceptible Patients
- impaired renal blood flow
- dehydration
- impaired renal function
- other nephrotoxic therapies
- Respiratory
- aspirin sensitive asthma
- GI
- peptic ulceration stomach duodenum
- Platelets
- reduces stickiness
- increased bleeding
All COX-1
19Paracetamol
- The most under-rated drug in the BNF
- Stickle, B.R. 1996 (and loads of times since)
- Inhibits central COX
- BUT - role of central COX unclear
- Analgesic
- Antipyretic
- No peripheral effects
- No toxicity in therapeutic doses (?)
20Opiates Sites of action
- Central
- PAGM - role in descending control
- Spinal
- Gating function Inhibits release of
neurotransmitters involved in pain transmission - Peripheral
- receptors only active in inflammatory states
21Opiate Side Effects
- Respiratory depression
- antagonised by pain
- all opiates the same at equianalgesic doses
- risk small if properly titrated
- CNS
- sedation, euphoria, dysphoria, NV, miosis
- GU/GI
- urinary retention, decreased GI motility, spasm
of sphincter of Oddi
22Tramadol
- Weak µ agonist (1/6000 v morphine)
- selective µ agonist
- pure agonist activity
- 30 of effect antagonised by naloxone
- Noradrenaline reuptake inhibitor
- 5-HT reuptake inhibitor
- Non-controlled drug
23Tramadol Descending control
24Tramadol
- Advantages
- relative lack of respiratory depression
- less sedative vs morphine
- ?? less N V
- less GI SFX
- non-controlled drug
- oral preparation effective
- Disadvantages
- slightly less potent vs morphine
- slower onset times
- cost
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26Ketamine
- NMDA receptor antagonist
- NMDA receptors shown to have role in development
of hyperalgesia - Blockade of NMDA receptors may prevent
development of opioid tolerance - Established opioid sparing effect
27Ketamine
- General anaesthetic agent
- Doses typically 1-2mg/kg
- Atypical
- Preserves CVS / resp function
- Airway reflexes / patency generally preserved
- Analgesic
- Bronchodilator
- Famous side effects
- Hallucinations
28Ketamine
- Analgesic at low doses
- 10 of anaesthetic doses
- LOADS of studies
- Cochrane review
- It works
- 30-50 reduction in opiate doses
- Reduced PONV
29Ketamine
- How to give it?
- Single dose ?
- Continuous infusion ?
- Added to PCA X
- Epidurally ? ?
30Ketamine Side effects?
- Doses low
- Tolerability good in all trials
- Reduced PONV pruritis
- Some increased sedation
- Low incidents of hallucination / vivid dreaming
31Ketamine
- Proven adjuvant in opioid tolerance in chronic
and cancer pain - Poorly studied in acute pain
- But
- Significant reduction in opioid requirements in
positive studies - Anecdotally effective
32Multi-Modal Analgesia
- Concept of combination therapy
- Advantages
- Reduction in SFX
- minimising doses, synergy
- IMPROVED ANALGESIA
- Disadvantages
- Multiplication of SFX
- Cost
- Polypharmacy
33Multi-Modal Analgesia
Nerve Endings
Peripheral Nerves
Plexuss
Nerve Roots
Cord
Brainstem
Brain
34Multi-Modal Analgesia
35Multi-Modal Analgesia The Rules
- Give REGULAR background analgesia
- Paracetamol / NSAID
- On the clock
- Give as required opiate
- Dose / strength dependant on pain problem
- Review
36Multi-Modal Analgesia ?
Opiate
As required
Plus
(maybe)
37Multi-Modal Analgesia - really
NSAID Paracetamol
Regularly
And
As required opiate
38Modes of delivery
- Regular(bd, tds, qds)
- PRN
- (Patient receives NONE)
- Slow release
- Infusion
- PCA
- IV, Epidural
39Routes of delivery
- Oral
- Rectal
- Subcutaneous
- Transdermal
- Intramuscular
- Intravenous
- Epidural
- Intra-spinal
40IM / SC Morphine
Effective Plasma Concentration
Morphine concentration
3 hours
Time
41Intermittent subcut / IM
42PCA Morphine
Effective Plasma Concentration
Morphine concentration
Time
bolus 1mg
43Sustained release oral opiate
Effective Plasma Concentration
Plasma morphine concentration
4
8
12
Time
44Sustained release supplement
Effective Plasma Concentration
Plasma morphine concentration
4
8
12
Time
45?
46Summary
- Pain pathway vulnerable at a number of points
- Peripheral sensitisation primary problem
- Transmission can be modulated spinally and
centrally - Combination therapy
- Maximises analgesia
- Minimises side effects
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48Local Anaesthesia and Epidural Blocks
49Analgesic Drugs
Nerve Endings
Peripheral Nerves
Plexuss
Nerve Roots
Cord
Brainstem
Brain
50Local Anaesthetics
- Lignocaine, bupivacaine, prilocaine.
- Sodium channel blockers
- Pharmacologically filthy !!!
- Prevent propagation of action potential
- LA molecules must pass into axon to block sodium
channel from within.
51Local anaesthetics
Na
depolarisation
Na
un-ionised ionised
52LA Differential Blockade
- Due to differential penetration into different
nerve types - Myelinated, thick fibres Relatively spared
- Motor fibres spared (relatively)
- Pain fibres blocked easily (luckily)
53Local anaesthetics
- Limiting factor in use is toxicity
- Toxicity - high plasma levels
- Intravenous injection
- Absorption gt rate of metabolism high plasma
levels - \ vasoconstrictors - reduce blood flow, reduce
absorption. - Toxicity depends on-
- dose used
- rate of absorption
- patient weight
- drug ( bupivacaine gt lignocaine gt prilocaine )
54Regional local anaesthesia
- Retain awareness / consciousness
- Lack of global effects of systemic analgesics
- Derangement of CVS physiology
- proportional to size of anaesthetised area
- Relative sparing of respiratory function
55Regional local anaesthesia
- Local anaesthesia
- Field blocks
- hernia repair
- Plexus blocks
- Limb blocks
- e.g. femoral N sciatic N
- Central neural (neuraxial) block
- epidural
- spinal
Increasing physiological impact
56Neuraxial block
57Postoperative epidural analgesia
- Proven benefit in certain groups of patients
- ? Proven benefit for certain ops
- High incidence of minor CVS side effects
- Low incidence of major CNS side effects
- Haematoma / abscess
58Epidural advantages
- Gold standard analgesia
- Improved co-operation with physiotherapy /
nursing staff - Avoid systemic opiates
- Less sedation
- Less interference with resp function
59Epidural opiates
- Act on spinal cord
- Improve quality of analgesia
- Relative lack of systemic effects
- But-
- Pruritis
- High incidence of respiratory depression when
combined with systemic opiates.
60Epidural infusions
- Short half life of LA / opiate in epidural space
(3-4 hours) - Repeated top ups
- less stable block
- breakthrough pain
- Infusion
- requires kit
- Rate can be variable (sliding scale)
- Tachyphlaxis
61Physiology of neuraxial block CVS
Venodilation
MAP CO SVR
Arteriolar vasodilation
62Signs and symptoms of local anaesthetic toxicity
- Circumoral and lingual numbness and tingling
- Light-headedness
- Tinnitus, visual disturbances
- Muscular twitching
- Drowsiness
- Cardiovascular depression
- Convulsions
- Coma
- Cardiorespiratory arrest
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64Scenario 1
- 26 y/o asthmatic man
- Appx. Given IM Morphine 10mg 4 hourly. Pain
scores 3-4
65Scenario 2
- 80 y/o lady. No sig PMH.
- Hemiarthroplasty. No analgesia prescribed.
Spinal anaesthetic wearing off. Not PU'd.
66Scenario 3
- 56 y/o man. Metastatic lung Ca.
- Pathological femur. IM Nail
- Normally has MXL 150mg
67Scenario 4
- 75 y/o lady. L hemi-colectomy.
- PCA Morphine. Sedated .
- Pain scores 3-4 (when awake !!)
68Scenario 5
- 65 y/o lady. Longstanding pain in right hip.
- Takes paracetamol occasionally codeine 30mg
prn. - Pain worsening recently interfering with daily
living