Journal article

Persistent pain after cardiac surgery: An audit of high thoracic epidural and primary opioid analgesia therapies

SC Ho, CF Royse, AG Royse, A Penberthy, R McRae

Anesthesia and Analgesia | LIPPINCOTT WILLIAMS & WILKINS | Published : 2002

Abstract

Persistent pain is an underreported morbidity after cardiac surgery. We sent pain surveys to all patients who underwent coronary artery bypass graft surgery from 1997 to 1999 from a single surgeon's experience. Two analgesia strategies were used: high thoracic epidural (HTEA) or IV and oral opiates (OPIOID) for 48-72 h after surgery. Persistent pain was defined as pain still present two or more months after surgery, and all questions referred to the time of survey only. From 356 questionnaires, 305 patients responded, and 61 of them refused consent, leaving 244 patients with complete surveys (HTEA, 150 patients [69%]; OPIOID, 94 patients [68%]). The incidence of persistent pain at any site w..

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University of Melbourne Researchers