J Korean Pain Soc.  2000 Nov;13(2):218-223.

IV Ketorolac Combined with Morphine PCA in Postoperative Pain Control after Lumbar Disc Surgery

Affiliations
  • 1Department of Anesthesiology and Pain Medicine, HanGang Sacred Heart Hospital, Hallym University College of Medicine, Korea.
  • 2Department of Anesthesiology, Samsung Medical Center, SungKyunKwan University School of Medicine, Seoul, Korea.

Abstract

BACKGROUND: This study was conducted to evaluate the efficacy of a parenteral nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory agent for management of post-surgical pain and its effect on hospital stay and long-term surgical outcome.
METHODS
Total of 40 patients undergoing lumbar discectomy were randomly assigned to two groups, receiving either 1) 30 mg intravenous ketorolac upon surgical closure, every 6 hours for 36 hours, and morphine IV PCA (intravenous patient controlled analgesia), or 2) only morphine PCA. A blinded investigator recorded; the visual analog pain scores, total postoperative narcotic consumption, complications by morphine PCA, length of hospitalization (from surgery to discharge), and long-term outcome at 6 weeks.
RESULTS
The patients who received IV ketorolac and morphine PCA reported significantly lower visual analog pain scores than patients receiving only morphine PCA. Cumulative morphine doses were significantly lower in the ketorolac group (P<0.001). There was no significant difference between groups in the frequency of side effects related to morphine PCA. Mean length of hospitalization was longer for patients receiving only morphine PCA, but there was no statistical significance. Six weeks after surgery, four (20.0%) patients who received only morphine PCA suffered persistent back pain. In contrary, all those patients who received ketorolac were free of back pain at follow-up (P<0.05).
CONCLUSIONS
These results suggest that intermittent IV bolus ketorolac, when used with opioid IV PCA is more effective than opioid IV PCA alone for postoperative pain following lumbar disc surgery. However, this strategy did not contribute to early discharge from hospital after lumbar disc surgery. The effect to long-term surgical outcome was not conclusive.

Keyword

Analgesia patient controlled; postoperative; Analgesics ketorolac; morphine; Surgery neurologic, lumbar disc herniation

MeSH Terms

Back Pain
Diskectomy
Follow-Up Studies
Hospitalization
Humans
Ketorolac*
Length of Stay
Morphine*
Pain, Postoperative*
Passive Cutaneous Anaphylaxis*
Research Personnel
Ketorolac
Morphine
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