1. Trialing and Maintenance Dosing Using a Low-Dose Intrathecal Opioid Method for Chronic Nonmalignant Pain: A Prospective 36-Month Study
- Author
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Ben Smith, Christina Lamar, Jay S. Grider, Jason Lee, Michael E. Harned, Anjum Bux, and Mark A. Etscheidt
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,Visual analogue scale ,Population ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,030202 anesthesiology ,Medicine ,Humans ,Pain Management ,Prospective Studies ,education ,Prospective cohort study ,Injections, Spinal ,Aged ,Pain Measurement ,education.field_of_study ,business.industry ,Chronic pain ,General Medicine ,Pain scale ,Infusion Pumps, Implantable ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Analgesics, Opioid ,Anesthesiology and Pain Medicine ,Nociception ,Treatment Outcome ,Neurology ,Opioid ,Anesthesia ,Morphine ,Female ,Neurology (clinical) ,Chronic Pain ,business ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Objective To evaluate low-dose intrathecal opioid trialing and maintenance with regard to analgesia and psychometric functional capacity. Materials and Methods Prospective cohort of subjects offered, trialed and maintained using low-dose opioid therapy via an intrathecal drug delivery system. Analgesia, measured by visual analog scale and the Global Pain Scale, and function, measured by Multidimensional Pain Inventory and Global Pain Scale, are evaluated. Population analysis by age, gender, oral opioid dose, diagnosis, and pain type is reported. Results Fifty-eight subjects enrolled in the 36-month evaluation period with mean opioid intrathecal opioid dose less than 350 μg per day of morphine equivalent utilized. Primary nociceptive pain type were associated with lower intrathecal opioid doses and improved visual analog scale pain rating and improved pain severity and interference on the Multidimensional Pain Inventory. Conclusions This study adds to the growing body of literature suggesting that low-dose intrathecal analgesia without oral opioid supplementation can be efficacious. It appears that this approach may achieve analgesia with lower doses in those with primary nociceptive pain type
- Published
- 2015