POSTOPERATIVE SPINAL ANALGESIA WITH MORPHINE
Open Access
- 1 August 1981
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Elsevier in British Journal of Anaesthesia
- Vol. 53 (8) , 817-820
- https://doi.org/10.1093/bja/53.8.817
Abstract
Patients with pain after operation received morphine hydrochloride intrathecally in doses of 0.02mg kg– (n = 30) and 0.2mgkg (n = 30). The high-dose group showed slightly longer-lasting and more potent analgesia than the low-dose group. Sedation, decrcases in heart rate and systolic arterial pressure, oliguria, nausea and urinary retention were more frequent in the high-dose group. Two patients of the high-dose group showed evidence of respiratory depression which appeared after a late change in posture (7 and 11 h). We conclude that postoperative analgesia with intrathecal morphine 0.02mg kg–1 must be followed by a prolonged head-up posture and be performed in hospital units where the treatment of respiratory depression is competent.Keywords
This publication has 2 references indexed in Scilit:
- EPIDURAL MORPHINE IN TREATMENT OF PAINThe Lancet, 1979
- Analgesia Mediated by a Direct Spinal Action of NarcoticsScience, 1976