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Rectal indomethacin reduces postoperative pain and...
Journal article

Rectal indomethacin reduces postoperative pain and morphine use after cardiac surgery

Abstract

PurposeTo evaluate the combination of rectal indomethacin with patient controlled intravenous morphine analgesia (PCA) on postoperative pain relief and opioid use after cardiac surgery.MethodsWith institutional ethics approval, 57 consenting adults undergoing elective aortocoronary bypass surgery were randomly assigned preoperatively in a double-blind fashion to receive either placebo (n = 26) or indomethadn 100 mg suppositories (n = 31), 2–3 hr postoperatively, and 12 hr later. Both groups utilized PCA morphine. Pain scores in the two treatment groups were assessed on a 10-cm visual analogue scale (VAS) (at rest and with cough) at 4, 6, 12, 18 and 24 hr after initial dosing, and were analyzed through a 2 × 5 repeated measures of variance. The 24 hr analgesic consumption, 12 and 24 hr chest tube blood loss, and time to tracheal extubation were also recorded, and compared for the two treatment arms through Student’s t test on independent samples.ResultsPostoperative morphine consumption in the first 24 hr was 38% less in the indomethadn group (22.40 ± 12.55 mg) than the placebo group (35.99 ± 25.84 mg), P= 0.019. Pain scores, measured with a VAS, were 26% to 66% lower in the indomethacinvs placebo group at rest (P=0.006), but not with cough, for all times assessed. There was no difference in blood loss (at 12 hr) or time to tracheal extubation for both groups.ConclusionThe combination of indomethacin with morphine after cardiac surgery results in reduced postoperative pain scores and opioid use without an increase in side effects.

Authors

Rapanos T; Murphy P; Szalai JP; Burlacoff L; Lam-McCulloch J; Kay J

Journal

Journal canadien d'anesthésie, Vol. 46, No. 8, pp. 725–730

Publisher

Springer Nature

Publication Date

January 1, 1999

DOI

10.1007/bf03013906

ISSN

0832-610X

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