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Long-Acting Patient-Controlled Opioids Are Not...
Journal article

Long-Acting Patient-Controlled Opioids Are Not Associated With More Postoperative Hypoxemia Than Short-Acting Patient-Controlled Opioids After Noncardiac Surgery

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Opioids can contribute to postoperative desaturation. Short-acting opioids, titrated to need, may cause less desaturation than longer-acting opioids. We thus tested the primary hypothesis that long-acting patient-controlled intravenous opioids are associated with more hypoxemia (defined as an integrated area under a postoperative oxyhemoglobin saturation of 95%) than short-acting opioids. METHODS: This analysis was a substudy of …

Authors

Belcher AW; Khanna AK; Leung S; Naylor AJ; Hutcherson MT; Nguyen BM; Makarova N; Sessler DI; Devereaux PJ; Saager L

Journal

Anesthesia & Analgesia, Vol. 123, No. 6, pp. 1471–1479

Publisher

Wolters Kluwer

Publication Date

December 2016

DOI

10.1213/ane.0000000000001534

ISSN

0003-2999