Preoperative Gabapentin for Acute Post‐thoracotomy Analgesia: A Randomized,Double‐Blinded,Active Placebo‐Controlled Study |
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Authors: | Michelle A. O. Kinney MD Carlos B. Mantilla MD PhD Paul E. Carns MD Melissa A. Passe RRT Michael J. Brown MD W. Michael Hooten MD Timothy B. Curry MD PhD Timothy R. Long MD C. Thomas Wass MD Peter R. Wilson MBBS PhD Toby N. Weingarten MD Marc A. Huntoon MD Richard H. Rho MD William D. Mauck MD Juan N. Pulido MD Mark S. Allen MD Stephen D. Cassivi MD MSc Claude Deschamps MD Francis C. Nichols MD K. Robert Shen MD Dennis A. Wigle MD PhD Sheila L. Hoehn RN Sherry L. Alexander RN Andrew C. Hanson BS Darrell R. Schroeder MS |
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Affiliation: | 1. Department of Anesthesiology;2. Department of Physiology;3. Anesthesia Clinical Research Unit;4. SMH Anesthesiology Division;5. Division of Pain Management;6. Department of Surgery;7. Division of Biostatistics, Department of Health Sciences Research, College of Medicine Mayo Clinic, Rochester, Minnesota, U.S.A. |
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Abstract: | Background: The role of preoperative gabapentin in postoperative pain management is not clear, particularly in patients receiving regional blockade. Patients undergoing thoracotomy benefit from epidural analgesia but still may experience significant postoperative pain. We examined the effect of preoperative gabapentin in thoracotomy patients. Methods: Adults undergoing elective thoracotomy were enrolled in this prospective, randomized, double‐blinded, placebo‐controlled study, and randomly assigned to receive 600 mg gabapentin or active placebo (12.5 mg diphenhydramine) orally within 2 hours preoperatively. Standardized management included thoracic epidural infusion, intravenous patient‐controlled opioid analgesia, acetaminophen and ketorolac. Pain scores, opioid use and side effects were recorded for 48 hours. Pain was also assessed at 3 months. Results: One hundred twenty patients (63 placebo and 57 gabapentin) were studied. Pain scores did not significantly differ at any time point (P = 0.53). Parenteral and oral opioid consumption was not significantly different between groups on postoperative day 1 or 2 (P > 0.05 in both cases). The frequency of side effects such as nausea and vomiting or respiratory depression was not significantly different between groups, but gabapentin was associated with decreased frequency of pruritus requiring nalbuphine (14% gabapentin vs. 43% control group, P < 0.001). The frequency of patients experiencing pain at 3 months post‐thoracotomy was also comparable between groups (70% gabapentin vs. 66% placebo group, P = 0.72). Conclusions: A single preoperative oral dose of gabapentin (600 mg) did not reduce pain scores or opioid consumption following elective thoracotomy, and did not confer any analgesic benefit in the setting of effective multimodal analgesia that included thoracic epidural infusion. |
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Keywords: | pain postoperative post‐thoracotomy pain preanesthetic medication acute pain service patient‐controlled epidural analgesia gabapentin |
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