Lessons learnt in evidence-based perioperative pain medicine: changing the focus from the medication and procedure to the patient.
Philipp LirkKristin L SchreiberPublished in: Regional anesthesia and pain medicine (2024)
Over time, the focus of evidence-based acute pain medicine has shifted, from a focus on drugs and interventions (characterized by numbers needed to treat), to an appreciation of procedure-specific factors (characterized by guidelines and meta-analyses), and now anesthesiologists face the challenge to integrate our current approach with the concept of precision medicine. Psychometric and biopsychosocial markers can potentially guide clinicians on who may need more aggressive perioperative pain management, or who would respond particularly well to a given analgesic intervention. The challenge will be to identify an easily assessable set of parameters that will guide perioperative physicians in tailoring the analgesic strategy to procedure and patient.
Keyphrases
- pain management
- chronic pain
- neuropathic pain
- cardiac surgery
- patients undergoing
- meta analyses
- minimally invasive
- case report
- randomized controlled trial
- systematic review
- primary care
- liver failure
- anti inflammatory
- spinal cord
- drug induced
- acute kidney injury
- palliative care
- emergency department
- clinical practice
- hepatitis b virus
- aortic dissection
- adverse drug
- extracorporeal membrane oxygenation
- acute respiratory distress syndrome
- electronic health record