Best Practice & Research Clinical Anaesthesiology
Volume 21, Issue 1 , Pages 51-63, March 2007

Do we need preemptive analgesia for the treatment of postoperative pain?

  • Sina Grape, MD (Resident in Anaesthesiology)

      Affiliations

    • Corresponding Author InformationCorresponding author. Tel.: +41 22 382 74 41; Fax: +41 22 382 75 11.
  • ,
  • Martin R. Tramèr, MD, DPhil (Professor of Anaesthesiology)

Division of Anaesthesiology, Geneva University Hospitals, CH-1211 Geneva, Switzerland

Preemptive analgesia means that an analgesic intervention is started before the noxious stimulus arises in order to block peripheral and central nociception. This afferent blockade of nociceptive impulses is maintained throughout the intra-operative and post-operative period. The goals of preemptive analgesia are, first, to decrease acute pain after tissue injury, second, to prevent pain-related pathologic modulation of the central nervous system, and third, to inhibit the persistence of postoperative pain and the development of chronic pain. So far, the promising results from animal models have not been translated into clinical practice. Therefore, clinicians should rely on conventional anaesthetic and analgesic methods with proven efficacy, i.e. a multimodal approach including the combination of strong opioids, non-opioid analgesics, and peripheral or neuraxial local anaesthetics that act at different sites of the pain pathways.

Key words: preemptive analgesia, postoperative pain, chronic pain, peripheral and central sensitization, central nervous system plasticity, hyperalgesia, systematic reviews

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PII: S1521-6896(06)00078-4

doi:10.1016/j.bpa.2006.11.004

Best Practice & Research Clinical Anaesthesiology
Volume 21, Issue 1 , Pages 51-63, March 2007