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Contributions

Patient-controIled analgesia for postcholecystectomy pain: a pilot study

Lilian Gonsalves, MD, Edward C. Covington, MD, Thomas Broughan, MD, Kathleen O. Currie, RN, Charles Pippenger, PHD, John Raaf, MD, Joanne Schneider, RN, Kirk Shepard, MD and Ramesh Sogal, MD
Cleveland Clinic Journal of Medicine January 1990, 57 (1) 57-59;
Lilian Gonsalves
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Edward C. Covington
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Thomas Broughan
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Kathleen O. Currie
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Charles Pippenger
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John Raaf
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Joanne Schneider
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Kirk Shepard
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Ramesh Sogal
Section of Liaison Psychiatry, The Cleveland Clinic Foundation.
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ABSTRACT

Patient-controlled analgesia (PCA) is designed to avoid both excessive and inadequate analgesia in postoperative pain by allowing the patient self-administration of intravenous narcotics within a range of parameters established by the physician. Of 24 patients undergoing elective cholecystectomy referred to our study over a 12-month period, 11 were assigned to PCA and eight successfully completed the study. Most of them had good analgesia, were satisfied with PCA, and had no evidence of confusion, psychic distress, or visual-motor impairment. Serum morphine concentrations of 10 - 30 ng/mL were sufficient to obtain good analgesia in six of eight patients. Complications included severe respiratory depression and abdominal cramps.

INDEX TERMS
  • Analgesia
  • Pain
  • Postoperative
  • Copyright © 1990 The Cleveland Clinic Foundation. All Rights Reserved.
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Cleveland Clinic Journal of Medicine: 57 (1)
Cleveland Clinic Journal of Medicine
Vol. 57, Issue 1
1 Jan 1990
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Patient-controIled analgesia for postcholecystectomy pain: a pilot study
Lilian Gonsalves, Edward C. Covington, Thomas Broughan, Kathleen O. Currie, Charles Pippenger, John Raaf, Joanne Schneider, Kirk Shepard, Ramesh Sogal
Cleveland Clinic Journal of Medicine Jan 1990, 57 (1) 57-59;

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Patient-controIled analgesia for postcholecystectomy pain: a pilot study
Lilian Gonsalves, Edward C. Covington, Thomas Broughan, Kathleen O. Currie, Charles Pippenger, John Raaf, Joanne Schneider, Kirk Shepard, Ramesh Sogal
Cleveland Clinic Journal of Medicine Jan 1990, 57 (1) 57-59;
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Keywords

  • Analgesia
  • Pain
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