Opioid sensitivity of chronic pain: a patient‐controlled analgesia method
Open Access
- 1 September 1992
- journal article
- Published by Wiley in Anaesthesia
- Vol. 47 (9) , 757-767
- https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1365-2044.1992.tb03253.x
Abstract
Twenty-two patients with chronic pain of malignant or nonmalignant origin were given intravenous morphine by patient-controlled analgesia. A prestudy judgment was made from the characteristics of the pain as to whether it was nociceptive or neuropathic. Analgesic efficacy was assessed by a nurse-observer; adverse events were noted and plasma morphine and metabolitie concentrations measured. Three categories of opioid response were distinguished. Good responders obtained > 70 mm relief on the visual analogue scale, with minimal or manageable adverse events. Moderate responders obtained < 70 but > 30 mm relief with more problematic adverse events, and poor responders had < 30 mm relief with troublesome adverse events. This method for the study of opioid sensitivity allowed a wide dosage range to be studied. The simultaneous analgesic and adverse event measurements showed that the spectrum of observed response was wide, and response category could be judged for the majority by 4 h. In those with poor or moderate response, adverse event severity limited further dose increment. The relationship between pain characteristics and response showed that some pains judged to be neuropathic had a good response to opioid (5/13), and some pains judged to be nociceptive did not (5/14). The study suggests that the pattern of response is not as black and white as the prediction of good response from nociceptive pain and poor from neuropathic pain would suggest, although nociceptive pain was more likely than neuropathic pain to show a good response. For the moderate responders opioid titration may, in the absence of other effective treatments, be useful, but the analgesic endpoint may not be totally satisfactory. The method provides an operational definition of opioid sensitivity.Keywords
This publication has 12 references indexed in Scilit:
- Morphine differentially affects the sensory and affective pain ratings in neurogenic and idiopathic forms of painPain, 1991
- A call for more science, not more rhetoric, regarding opioids and neuropathic painPain, 1991
- Both intravenous lidocaine and morphine reduce the pain of postherpetic neuralgiaNeurology, 1991
- Allodynia-like effects in rat after ischaemic spinal cord injury photochemically induced by laser irradiationPain, 1991
- The nature of opioid responsiveness and its implications for neuropathic pain: new hypotheses derived from studies of opioid infusionsPain, 1990
- Variables of patient‐controlled analgesia 4: the relevance of bolus dose size to supplement a background infusionAnaesthesia, 1990
- Towards physiologically based treatment of patients with neuropathic painPain, 1990
- Repeated low doses of morphine do not induce tolerance but increase the opioid antinociceptive effect in rats with a peripheral neuropathyBrain Research, 1990
- Modelling estimation and control in the relief of post-operative painAutomatica, 1985
- Unexpected complication of successful nerve blockAnaesthesia, 1981