Pain management in pediatric day surgery patients at The Maternal and Child Medical Research Center in Mongolia

BackgroundPediatric day surgery shortens the hospital stay, reduces the exposure of nosocomial infections and allows for active parental participation. But pain delays the recovery and it increases the morbidity, including nausea and vomiting, and the maladaptive behavioral changes. This study was c...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Jung Un Lee, Sh. Enkhtuvshin, M. Ariuntungalag, B. Odgerel, S. Burmaa, L. Ganbold
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Korean Society of Anesthesiologists 2010-03-01
Series:Korean Journal of Anesthesiology
Subjects:
Online Access:http://ekja.org/upload/pdf/kjae-58-272.pdf
id doaj-e94be9333ba4457ba361b371c789aa92
record_format Article
spelling doaj-e94be9333ba4457ba361b371c789aa922020-11-25T03:42:12ZengKorean Society of AnesthesiologistsKorean Journal of Anesthesiology2005-64192005-75632010-03-0158327227610.4097/kjae.2010.58.3.2726864Pain management in pediatric day surgery patients at The Maternal and Child Medical Research Center in MongoliaJung Un Lee0Sh. Enkhtuvshin1M. Ariuntungalag2B. Odgerel3S. Burmaa4L. Ganbold5Department of Anesthesiology and Pain Medicine, School of Medicine, Chungnam National University, Daejeon, Korea.Department of Pediatric Anesthesiology, Maternal and Child Medical Research Center, Ulaanbaatar, Mongolia.Department of Pediatric Anesthesiology, Maternal and Child Medical Research Center, Ulaanbaatar, Mongolia.Department of Pediatric Anesthesiology, Maternal and Child Medical Research Center, Ulaanbaatar, Mongolia.Department of Pediatric Anesthesiology, Maternal and Child Medical Research Center, Ulaanbaatar, Mongolia.Department of Anesthesia, Health Science University, Ulaanbaatar, Mongolia.BackgroundPediatric day surgery shortens the hospital stay, reduces the exposure of nosocomial infections and allows for active parental participation. But pain delays the recovery and it increases the morbidity, including nausea and vomiting, and the maladaptive behavioral changes. This study was conducted to compare the effect of rectally administered paracetamol or diclofenac combined with regional nerve block with the traditional pain control method.MethodsTwo hundred forty one randomly selected pediatric patients were allocated into two groups. The empirical pain relief group (the control group, n = 120) included the patients that received intravenous sulpyrin and/or meperidine postoperatively. The patients in the multimodal preemptive pain relief group (the study group, n = 121) received regional nerve blockade with 0.25% bupivacaine combined with preoperative rectally administered paracetamol 45 mg/kg or diclofenac 1 mg/kg 60 min before surgery for cases that were to undergo lower abdominal surgery. But only paracetamol or diclofenac was rectally administered preoperatively in the other surgical cases.ResultsThe mean time in the recovery room for the study group was shorter than that for the control group. The postoperative pain was hurts even more in 16.7%, worst in 11.8%, a whole lot in 26.5% and no pain in 27.5% of the control group patients. But the pain was hurts little more only in 11%, a little bit in 10.0% and no pain in 88.9% of the study group patients. The average postoperative VAS score was 0.21 ± 0.6 in the study group and 8.36 ± 1.7 in the control group, respectively. Vomiting, nausea and fever were more frequently observed in the control group.ConclusionsThe pain intensity of the children who were treated with rectally administered paracetamol or diclofenac combined with regional nerve block before surgery was significantly decreased as compared to that of the children who were treated with the traditional method.http://ekja.org/upload/pdf/kjae-58-272.pdfneural blockadepediatric postoperative painpreemptive analgesia
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Jung Un Lee
Sh. Enkhtuvshin
M. Ariuntungalag
B. Odgerel
S. Burmaa
L. Ganbold
spellingShingle Jung Un Lee
Sh. Enkhtuvshin
M. Ariuntungalag
B. Odgerel
S. Burmaa
L. Ganbold
Pain management in pediatric day surgery patients at The Maternal and Child Medical Research Center in Mongolia
Korean Journal of Anesthesiology
neural blockade
pediatric postoperative pain
preemptive analgesia
author_facet Jung Un Lee
Sh. Enkhtuvshin
M. Ariuntungalag
B. Odgerel
S. Burmaa
L. Ganbold
author_sort Jung Un Lee
title Pain management in pediatric day surgery patients at The Maternal and Child Medical Research Center in Mongolia
title_short Pain management in pediatric day surgery patients at The Maternal and Child Medical Research Center in Mongolia
title_full Pain management in pediatric day surgery patients at The Maternal and Child Medical Research Center in Mongolia
title_fullStr Pain management in pediatric day surgery patients at The Maternal and Child Medical Research Center in Mongolia
title_full_unstemmed Pain management in pediatric day surgery patients at The Maternal and Child Medical Research Center in Mongolia
title_sort pain management in pediatric day surgery patients at the maternal and child medical research center in mongolia
publisher Korean Society of Anesthesiologists
series Korean Journal of Anesthesiology
issn 2005-6419
2005-7563
publishDate 2010-03-01
description BackgroundPediatric day surgery shortens the hospital stay, reduces the exposure of nosocomial infections and allows for active parental participation. But pain delays the recovery and it increases the morbidity, including nausea and vomiting, and the maladaptive behavioral changes. This study was conducted to compare the effect of rectally administered paracetamol or diclofenac combined with regional nerve block with the traditional pain control method.MethodsTwo hundred forty one randomly selected pediatric patients were allocated into two groups. The empirical pain relief group (the control group, n = 120) included the patients that received intravenous sulpyrin and/or meperidine postoperatively. The patients in the multimodal preemptive pain relief group (the study group, n = 121) received regional nerve blockade with 0.25% bupivacaine combined with preoperative rectally administered paracetamol 45 mg/kg or diclofenac 1 mg/kg 60 min before surgery for cases that were to undergo lower abdominal surgery. But only paracetamol or diclofenac was rectally administered preoperatively in the other surgical cases.ResultsThe mean time in the recovery room for the study group was shorter than that for the control group. The postoperative pain was hurts even more in 16.7%, worst in 11.8%, a whole lot in 26.5% and no pain in 27.5% of the control group patients. But the pain was hurts little more only in 11%, a little bit in 10.0% and no pain in 88.9% of the study group patients. The average postoperative VAS score was 0.21 ± 0.6 in the study group and 8.36 ± 1.7 in the control group, respectively. Vomiting, nausea and fever were more frequently observed in the control group.ConclusionsThe pain intensity of the children who were treated with rectally administered paracetamol or diclofenac combined with regional nerve block before surgery was significantly decreased as compared to that of the children who were treated with the traditional method.
topic neural blockade
pediatric postoperative pain
preemptive analgesia
url http://ekja.org/upload/pdf/kjae-58-272.pdf
work_keys_str_mv AT jungunlee painmanagementinpediatricdaysurgerypatientsatthematernalandchildmedicalresearchcenterinmongolia
AT shenkhtuvshin painmanagementinpediatricdaysurgerypatientsatthematernalandchildmedicalresearchcenterinmongolia
AT mariuntungalag painmanagementinpediatricdaysurgerypatientsatthematernalandchildmedicalresearchcenterinmongolia
AT bodgerel painmanagementinpediatricdaysurgerypatientsatthematernalandchildmedicalresearchcenterinmongolia
AT sburmaa painmanagementinpediatricdaysurgerypatientsatthematernalandchildmedicalresearchcenterinmongolia
AT lganbold painmanagementinpediatricdaysurgerypatientsatthematernalandchildmedicalresearchcenterinmongolia
_version_ 1724526576823959552