Purpose: To explore and compare antihyperalgesic effects of butorphanol, flurbiprofen axetil, and a combination of both received before anesthesia induction. To evaluate and examine the incidence of adverse effects with the purpose of selecting the optimum dose. .
There are a dramatically increasing number of evidences that administration of the potent, ultra-short-acting opioid remifentanil seems to cause opioid-induced hyperalgesia (OIH) more frequently and predictably compared with the others, likely due to its rapid onset and offset. Therefore, prophylaxis of remifentanil induced hyperalgesia is indispensable to postoperative comfort and satisfaction. There is no denying the fact that OIH is related to central glutaminergic system and N-methyl-d-aspartate (NMDA) receptor-activation induced central sensitization. Prostaglandins can promote glutamate release from both astrocytes and spinal cord dorsal horns with subsequent activation of the NMDA receptors, and flurbiprofen axetil, as non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs), not only functionally antagonizes the NMDA receptor activation via inhibition of prostaglandins, but also is a targeted drug which gathers at the site of inflammation, thus greatly enhances the analgesic effect. While butorphanol has both spinal analgesic and sedative functions because of predominantly central κ-receptor agonist activation, other advantages of butorphanol include few side effects, very low addiction potential, and low toxicity on account of a partial agonist-antagonist activity to μ-receptor. Moreover, antihyperalgesic activity of κ opioids at the site of inflammation has been reported in various acute pain models. The following study is carried out to evaluate whether butorphanol combined with flurbiprofen axetil can be safely and effectively applied to preventing postoperative hyperalgesia induced by remifentanil in patients undergoing lower abdominal surgery.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
PREVENTION
Masking
DOUBLE
Enrollment
180
Normal Saline is intravenously administrated before anesthesia induction
Butorphanol is intravenously administrated
Flurbiprofen axetil is intravenously administrated
Tianjin Medical University General Hospital
Tianjin, Tianjin Municipality, China
Mechanical Hyperalgesia Threshold on the Dominant Inner Forearm
The mechanical hyperalgesia threshold was defined as the lowest force (g) necessary to bend a Von Frey filament, which was perceived to be painful by the patient and measured by Von Frey filament at 24 hours postoperatively
Time frame: 24 hours after surgery
Pain Score (NRS)
The pain score at rest was evaluated by pain 11-point numerical rating scale (NRS): 0 = no pain, 10 = greatest imaginable pain.
Time frame: 3h, 6h, 12h, and 24h after surgery
Time of First Postoperative Analgesic Requirement
First postoperative pain (NRS≥5) is initially controlled by titration of sufentanyl.
Time frame: 1 hour post surgery
Occurrence of Side Effects
Occurrence of side effects: nausea, vomiting, dizziness, headache, shivering, pruritus
Time frame: 24 hours
Total Dose of First Postoperative Analgesic Requirement
First postoperative pain (NRS≥5) is initially controlled by titration of sufentanyl.
Time frame: 1 hour after surgery
Cumulative Sufentanyl Consumption
Each patient was administered analgesics using a PCA pump containing sufentanil (100μg) in normal saline at a total volume of 100 ml after leaving PACU. This device was set to deliver a basal infusion of 2 ml/h and bolus doses of 0.5 ml with a 15-min lockout period. Sufentanyl cumulative consumption is recorded 24 hours postoperatively
Time frame: 24 hours
Normalized Area of Hyperalgesia Around the Incision
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Remifentanil is intravenously administrated
Sufentanil is intravenously administrated
The skin around the incision is stimulated in steps of 5 mm at intervals of 1 s starting outside of the hyperalgesic area in the direction of the incision. The distance from the incision to the first point where a 'painful', 'sore' or 'sharper' feeling occurred is measured and noted. This measurement is repeated at predefined radial lines around the incision. To eliminate the variable length of incision, this length is subtracted from the longer diameter leaving four radial distances from the end and from the middle of the incision. The normalized area of hyperalgesia is calculated by summing up the areas of the remaining four triangles measured by and Von Frey filament.
Time frame: 24 hours after surgery