postoperative pain control for total knee arthroplasty: continuous femoral nerve block versus intravenous patient controlled analgesia

Authors

rui min lee department of anesthesiology, intensive care and pain medicine, tan tock seng hospital, singapore; department of anesthesiology, intensive care and pain medicine, tan tock seng hospital, blk 501 ang mo kio ave 5 #06-3704 s (560501), singapore. tel: +65-097237392

john boon lim tey department of anesthesiology, intensive care and pain medicine, tan tock seng hospital, singapore

nicholas hai liang chua department of anesthesiology, intensive care and pain medicine, tan tock seng hospital, singapore

abstract

conclusions our study shows that there is improvement in pain scores, at rest and on movement, as well as a reduction in incidence of severe pain, in patients who receive cfnb versus those who receive intravenous pca. results our results show that the incidence of a severe pain episode was higher in the pca compared with the cfnb group. lower pain scores were observed in the cfnb group compared with the pca group from postoperative day (pod) 1 to 3, primarily due to lower rest pain scores in the cfnb group. patients and methods using our electronic acute pain service (aps) database, we reviewed the data of 579 patients who had received cfnbs compared with 1003 patients with intravenous pca over 4 years. background pain after total knee arthroplasty is severe and impacts functional recovery. objectives we performed a retrospective study, comparing conventional patient control analgesia (pca) modalities versus continuous femoral nerve blockade (cfnb) for 1582 post-tka (total knee arthroplasty) patients.

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Journal title:
anesthesiology and pain medicine

جلد ۱، شماره ۴، صفحات ۲۳۹-۲۴۲

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