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Enhanced recovery pathways (ERPs) utilise multimodal rehabilitation techniques to reduce post-operative pain and accelerate the rehabilitation process following surgery. Originally described following elective colonic surgery enhanced recovery pathways have gained increasing use following elective hip and knee joint replacement in recent years. Early studies have indicated that enhanced recovery pathways can reduce length of hospital stay, reduce complications and improve cost-effectiveness of joint replacement surgery. Despite this growing evidence base uptake has been slow in certain centres and many surgeons are yet to utilise enhanced recovery pathways in their practice. We look at the process and effects of implementing an enhanced recovery pathway following total hip replacement surgery at a district general hospital in the United Kingdom. A retrospective study was initially undertaken over a four-month period to assess patient demographics, length of stay, time to physiotherapy and complication rates including re-admission within 28 days. Based on national recommendations an enhanced recovery pathway protocol was then implemented for an elective total hip replacement list. Inclusion criteria were elective patients undergoing primary total hip replacement (THR) surgery. The pathway included pre-operative nutrition optimisation, 4mg ondansetron, 8mg dexamethasone and 1g tranexamic acid at induction and 150mL ropivacaine HCL 0.2%, 30mg ketorolac and adrenaline (RKA) mix infiltration to joint capsule, external rotators, gluteus tendon, iliotibial band, soft-tissues and skin around the hip joint. The patient was mobilised four-hours after surgery where possible and aimed to be discharged once mobile and pain was under control. Following implementation a prospective study was undertaken to compare patient demographics, length of stay and complication rates including re-admission within 28 days. 34 patients met the inclusion criteria and were included in each group pre and post-enhanced recovery pathway. Following implementation of an enhanced recovery pathway mean length of stay decreased from 5.4 days to 3.5 days (CI 1.94, p < 0.0001). Sub-group analysis based on ASA grade revealed that this reduction in length of stay was most pronounced in ASA 1 patients with mean length of stay reduced from 5.0 days to 3.2 days (CI 1.83, p < 0.0001). There was no significant change in the number of complications or re-admission rates following enhanced recovery pathway. The enhanced recovery pathway was quick and easy to implement with co-ordination between surgeons, anaesthetist, nursing staff and patients. This observational study of consecutive primary total hip replacement patients shows a substantial reduction in length of stay with no change in complication rates after the introduction of a multimodal enhanced recovery protocol. Both of these factors reduce hospital costs for elective THR patients and may improve patient experiences


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 100-B, Issue SUPP_15 | Pages 83 - 83
1 Nov 2018
Flynn S O'Reilly M Feeley I Sheehan E
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Knee osteoarthritis is a common, debilitating condition. Intra articular corticosteroid injections are a commonly used non-operative treatment strategy. Intra articular hip injection with Ketorolac (an NSAID) has proven to be as efficacious as corticosteroids. No prior study compares the efficacy of Ketorolac relative to corticosteroids for relief of discomfort in knee osteoarthritis. The study design was a single centre double blinded RCT. Severity of osteoarthritic changes were graded on plain film weightbearing radiographs using the Kellgren and Lawrence system. Injection was with either 30mg Ketorolac or 40mg Methylprednisolone, given by intra-articular injection, in a syringe with 5mls 0.5% Marcaine. Pre-injection clinical outcomes were assessed using the Numerical Pain Score (NPS), WOMAC, and Oxford knee scores. Patients' NPS scores were assessed at Day 1 and Day 14 post-injection. An assessment of all clinical outcomes took place in clinic at six weeks. There were 72 participants (83 knees) in the study. No patients were lost to follow-up. Mean age was 62.66 years (Range 29–85). 42 knees received a corticosteroid injection, 41 a NSAID injection. Mean Kellgren and Lawrence score was 3.1. There was no significant difference in pre-injection clinical scores in either group. There was a significant improvement of NPS on Day 1 and 14 in both injection groups(p<0.05). These improved pain scores were sustained at 6 weeks in both groups. WOMAC and Oxford Knee Scores showed a statistically significant improvement in the corticosteroid group. WOMAC scores showed significant improvement in the NSAID group, however these improvements didn't achieve statistical significance using the Oxford Knee Score. Corticosteroid or NSAID injectate are a safe and effective non-operative treatment strategy in the patient with knee osteoarthritis. Ketorolac appears to provide effective medium-term improvement of pain and clinical scores. Further follow-up is recommended to investigate if this trend in sustained


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 90-B, Issue SUPP_I | Pages 121 - 121
1 Mar 2008
Shore B Busch C Bhandari R Ganapathy S MacDonald S Rorabeck C Bourne R McCalden R
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This Blinded Randomized Clinical Trial outlines: how peri-articular intra-operative multimodal analgesia significantly reduces post-operative analgesia requirement. Sixty-four patients undergoing total knee replacement were randomised to receive a peri-articular intra-operative injection containing ropivacaine, ketorolac, epimorphine and epinephrine or nothing. Patients who received the injection demonstrated greater satisfaction and pain relief. Finally, patients in the injected group did not show any signs of cardio and central nervous system toxicity. Post-operative analgesia can be associated with troublesome side effects. Good peri-operative analgesia facilitates rehabilitation, improves patient satisfaction and may reduce hospital stay. The purpose of this study was to assess a novel cocktail for peri-articular analgesia after total knee replacement. Sixty-four patients undergoing total knee replacement were randomised to receive a peri-articular intra-operative injection containing ropivacaine, ketorolac, epimorphine and epinephrine or nothing. The anaesthetic analgesic regime was standardised. All patients received patient controlled analgesia (PCA) for twenty-four hours post surgery, followed by standard analgesia. VAS pain scores during activity and at rest and patient satisfaction scores were recorded pre and post operatively and at six week follow up. PCA consumption and overall analgesic requirement were measured. PCA use at six, twelve and over twenty-four hours post surgery was significantly less in patients receiving the injection (p< 0.01, p=0.016, p< 0.01). Patient satisfaction in PACU and four hours post operation was greater (p=0.016, p=0.013). VAS for pain during activity in PACU and at four hours were significantly less (p=0.04, p=0.007) in the injected group. The average ROM at six weeks was no different. Overall hospital stay and the incidence of wound complications were not different between the two groups. Peri-articular intra-operative multimodal analgesia significantly reduces post-operative analgesia requirement. Patient satisfaction and pain relief is greater in the injection group. No cardio and central nervous system toxicity was observed. Our novel cocktail of ketorolac, epimorphine, epinephrine and ropivacaine provides superior pain relief with no adverse side effects


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 98-B, Issue SUPP_17 | Pages 56 - 56
1 Nov 2016
Meneghini R
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Peri-articular injections (PAI) have become an important component in many multimodal pain protocols after total knee arthroplasty (TKA). Liposomal bupivacaine has emerged as a highly marketed and touted ingredient for PAI. However, the true efficacy of this material, particularly compared with less expensive PAI “cocktails” such as traditional bupivacaine or ropivacaine, has not been proven to date. Ropivacaine is considered a long-active local analgesic and in combination with epinephrine, ketorolac and clonidine has been shown to be a very effective PAI in a multimodal pain program. Liposomal bupivacaine has been similarly touted as a long-acting PAI. Initial reports provided support for liposomal bupivacaine PAI's providing similar pain relief as epidurals or femoral nerve blocks. The authors of these studies tout comparable pain control with decreased length of stay attributable to avoiding the side effects of epidurals and regional blocks. However, the ultimate clinical issue relates to how liposomal bupivacaine PAI's compares to traditional PAI cocktail ingredients such as bupivacaine and ropivacaine, which also avoid deleterious effects of regional analgesia, and at a much cheaper price point. Fortunately the highest quality research to date, which includes randomised prospective trials and retrospective controlled cohort studies, have reported consistent results. In a retrospective cohort study comparing a traditional ropivacaine and epinephrine versus liposomal bupivacaine PAI demonstrated no difference between the two groups in inpatient pain scores when used in a comprehensive multimodal pain control program. Further, two prospective randomised trials reported no difference in liposomal bupivacaine PAI compared to a traditional PAI of either bupivacaine or ropivacaine, epinephrine, ketorolac and clonidine. Finally, there have been some authors who contend the efficacy of liposomal bupivacaine PAI's is entirely dependent on a meticulous injection technique, however, comparative studies against traditional PAI ingredients with this recommended technique do not exist. In summary, the existing data supports that liposomal bupivacaine is an effective PAI that can be used to provide comparable pain relief to that achieved by regional blocks. However, liposomal bupivacaine has not been shown to provide superior pain relief when compared to traditional ropivacaine or bupivacaine PAI's in multimodal pain protocols after TKA. Further, liposomal bupivacaine is prohibitively priced at approximately six times that of ropivacaine-based PAI cocktails. Therefore, the “game changer” is likely the implementation of peri-articular injections as an essential component of multimodal pain control programs and NOT liposomal bupivacaine


Introduction. Pain control following total knee arthroplasty (TKA) heavily influences timing of mobilization and rehabilitation postoperatively as well as length of hospital stay. Recently, periarticular injection of liposomal bupivacaine (EXPAREL®; Pacira Pharmaceuticals, Inc., San Diego, California) has demonstrated pain relief comparable to femoral nerve block for postoperative analgesia in TKA with earlier mobilization and shortened hospital stay. In order to better explore the use of EXPAREL® in TKA, we standardized the postoperative analgesia to intraoperative periarticular injection of multimodal pain management, which is a recommended postoperative method of pain control in TKA. We studied the effectiveness of periarticular EXPAREL® in TKA postoperative pain control, including impact on early mobilization and length of hospital stay, compared to another local analgesic (Ropivacaine) when both are used as part of a multimodal pain management approach. Methods. We performed a double blind, randomized, controlled, prospective, IRB-approved study that enrolled 96 participants who underwent a unilateral TKA by one surgeon between May 2014 and March 2015. The two randomized groups were as follows: group 1 (control group) was given the standard intra-articular “pain cocktail” injection, consisting of ropivacaine, ketorolac, morphine, and epinephrine mixed with saline into a 100cc preparation and group 2 (study group) was given a similar intra-articular injection consisting of bupivacaine, ketorolac, morphine, and epinephrine mixed with saline into an 80cc preparation as well as an injection of EXPAREL®, 20cc of 1.3% EXPAREL®, to total 100cc. All patients included in the study were determined to be opioid naïve as described by the Food and Drug Administration criteria. Patients were treated with the same postoperative pain management protocol as well as the same post-operative physical therapy program. The consumption of oral and intravenous narcotics at specific time points as well as total use was recorded during hospital stay. We recorded Visual Analog Pain scores, hours to ambulate 100 feet and length of hospital stay (hours). Both the investigator and the patient were blinded as to which group the patient was randomized, making this a double blind study. Results. On a per hour basis, the mean use of narcotics of the two groups differed by only 0.1mg. For total narcotic use during hospital stay, the weighted sum used by patients in the EXPAREL® group, 97.7mg of hydrocodone ±42.84 mg, exceeded the weighted sum, 89.6 mg of hydrocodone ± 58.57 mg, used by patients in the control group. The difference between the two groups was not significant. The means for length of stay differed by only 26 minutes and the difference was not significant. Similarly insignificant, the means for the time to ambulate 100 feet differed by 53 minutes, with the EXPAREL® group actually taking the longer time. The two groups did not differ for Visual Analog Score for pain on day 1 or day 2 post-operatively. Conclusion. When comparing the use of EXPAREL® to another multimodal pain management approach using ropivacaine, there is no difference in post-operative opioid consumption, Visual Analong Scores for pain, amount of time to ambulate or length of hospital stay


The Bone & Joint Journal
Vol. 99-B, Issue 7 | Pages 904 - 911
1 Jul 2017
Wall PDH Sprowson† AP Parsons NR Parsons H Achten J Balasubramanian S Thompson P Costa ML

Aims. The aim of this study was to compare the effectiveness of a femoral nerve block and a periarticular infiltration in the management of early post-operative pain after total knee arthroplasty (TKA). Patients and Methods. A pragmatic, single centre, two arm parallel group, patient blinded, randomised controlled trial was undertaken. All patients due for TKA were eligible. Exclusion criteria included contraindications to the medications involved in the study and patients with a neurological abnormality of the lower limb. Patients received either a femoral nerve block with 75 mg of 0.25% levobupivacaine hydrochloride around the nerve, or periarticular infiltration with 150 mg of 0.25% levobupivacaine hydrochloride, 10 mg morphine sulphate, 30 mg ketorolac trometamol and 0.25 mg of adrenaline all diluted with 0.9% saline to make a volume of 150 ml. Results. A total of 264 patients were recruited and data from 230 (88%) were available for the primary analysis. Intention-to-treat analysis of the primary outcome measure of a visual analogue score for pain on the first post-operative day, prior to physiotherapy, was similar in both groups. The mean difference was -0.7 (95% confidence interval (CI) -5.9 to 4.5; p = 0.834). The periarticular group used less morphine in the first post-operative day compared with the femoral nerve block group (74%, 95% CI 55 to 99). The femoral nerve block group reported 39 adverse events, of which 27 were serious, in 31 patients and the periarticular group reported 51 adverse events, of which 38 were serious, in 42 patients up to six weeks post-operatively. None of the adverse events were directly attributed to either of the interventions under investigation. Conclusion . Periarticular infiltration is a viable and safe alternative to femoral nerve block for the early post-operative relief of pain following TKA. Cite this article: Bone Joint J 2017;99-B:904–11


Background. We compared pain relief after total hip arthroplasty using periarticular intraoperative injection along with single dose post operative injection of local anesthetic (THA) with the well-established practice of epidural infusion. Methods. 70 patients undergoing elective THA under combined spinal anaesthesia were randomly assigned to receive either (1) continuous epidural infusion (group B) or (2) infiltration around the hip joint with a mixture of 100 ml of bupivacaine (2 mg/ml) + 1ml ketorolac (30mg/ml) and 0.5ml epinephrine (1mg/ml) at the conclusion of surgery combined with one postoperative intraarticular injection of 20 ml. of Bupivacaine 0.5% + 1ml ketorolac (30mg/ml)+ 0.5 ml. epinephrine (1mg/ml) through an intraarticular catheter (group A). All patients received acetoaminophen 1gm 8 hourly for 72 hrs and injection ketoralac 30mg every 6 hourly IV(15mg if >65 yr 30mg if <65 yr). Breakthrough pain in any group (VAS >7) was treated by injection fentanyl 20 μg bolus at 10 min. interval till VAS reduced to < 4. If VAS 4–7 injection tramadol 50mg IV was given if VAS continued to be >4 after 15 min. then injection fentanyl 20 μg bolus was given at 10 min interval till VAS <4. Results. Narcotic consumption was significantly reduced in group A compared to group B (p=0.007). Pain levels at rest and during mobilization were similar in both groups during first 24 hrs but significantly reduced in group A after cessation of treatment. Interpretation. Wound infiltration combined with intraarticular injection of local Anaesthetics provides good pain relief for patients undergoing THA


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 91-B, Issue SUPP_II | Pages 321 - 321
1 May 2009
Saldaña A De la Rubia A González-Arabio D Díaz L
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Introduction and purpose: In this study we present the comparative results of two prospective studies carried out on 236 patients, treated with 5 different types of intravenous analgesia after knee arthroplasty, with the aim of detecting any differences. Materials and methods: We designed 5 different analgesia protocols that were approved by the Ethics Committee of our Hospital. Protocol A: Tramadol and Ketorolac. Protocol B: Meperidine and Ketorolac. Protocol C: PCA pump administration of Morphine Chloride and Magnesium Metamizol Protocol D: Tramadol and Dexketoprofen Trometanol Protocol E: Meperidine and Dexketoprofen Trometanol. We measured the following variables at 6, 24 and 48 hours: VAS (visual analog scale), nausea and vomiting as well as the rescue medication used, time to walking, patient satisfaction and hospital stay. Results: The 236 patients were distributed in groups of 40, except for group C in which there were 38 patients. Forty patients were lost to follow-up or did not comply with the inclusion criteria. With dexketoprofen trometanol associated with an opioid – tramadol or meperidine- pain control was satisfactory, whereas in the other 3 groups during the first 6 hours analgesic control was insufficient; the differences found were statistically significant. With the addition of an antiemetic (metoclopramide) there was a decrease in nausea and vomiting. Hospital stay was also shorter in patients with protocols D and E. Conclusion: On the basis of the data obtained in our study, we can conclude that dexketoprofen trometanol – in association with an opiate (tramadol or meperidine) is the NSAID of choice for intravenous analgesia after primary knee arthroplasty, since it shows good analgesic control, shortens hospital stays and has fewer secondary effects


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 93-B, Issue SUPP_IV | Pages 585 - 586
1 Nov 2011
Dodwell ER Latorre JG Parisini E Zwettler E Chandra D Mulpuri K Snyder B
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Purpose: Non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs) are powerful analgesics, frequently used for post-operative pain control. However, concerns regarding the potential deleterious effects of NSAIDs on bone healing have compelled many physicians to avoid NSAIDs in patients with fractures, osteotomies, and fusions. The purpose of this study was to systematically review and meta-analyze the best clinical evidence regarding the effects of NSAIDs on bone healing. Method: We performed a literature search for studies of fracture, osteotomy or fusion patients with NSAID exposure, and non-union as an outcome. Data on study design, patient characteristics and risk estimates were extracted. Pooled effect estimates were calculated. Study inclusion results were checked for evidence of publication bias. Metaregressions were performed to assess the impact of age, smoking, and study quality on reported risk of non-union. Results: Seven spine fusion and four long-bone fracture studies were included. A significant association between lower quality studies and higher reported odds ratios for non-union was identified. When only higher quality studies were considered, seven spine fusion studies were analyzed, and no statistically significant association between NSAID exposure and non-union was identified (OR=2.2, 95%CI:0.8, 6.3). No statistically significant association was found in sub-analysis of patients exposed to high dose IV/IM ketorolac (OR=2.0, 95%CI:0.4, 11.1), low dose IV/IM ketorolac (OR=1.2 95%CI:0.3, 4.5), or standard oral NSAIDs (OR=7.1, 95%CI:0.1, 520). In sub-analysis of the four most clinically relevant studies of adult spine fusion patients with well defined peri-operative NSAID exposure, no statistically significant association was found between NSAID exposure and risk of non-union (OR=0.8 95%CI:0.4, 1.4). Conclusion: Studies on NSAID exposure in long-bone healing settings were of lesser quality than studies in the spine fusion setting. Within the spine literature we could not demonstrate any increased risk of non-union with NSAID exposure. Randomized controlled trials (and meta-analyses of such trials) on the impact of standard NSAID and COX-2 inhibitor exposure in spine and long-bone fracture, fusion and osteotomy populations are warranted to confirm or refute the findings of this meta-analysis of observational studies


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 102-B, Issue SUPP_7 | Pages 71 - 71
1 Jul 2020
Vissa D Lin C Ganapathy S Bryant D Adhikari D MacDonald S Lanting B Vasarhelyi E Howard J
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Dexmedetomidine, an alpha 2 agonist, has been approved for providing sedation in the intensive care unit. Along with sedative properties, it has analgesic activity through its highly selective action on alpha 2 receptors. Recent studies have examined the use of dexmedetomidine as an adjuvant to prolong the duration of peripheral nerve blocks. Studies showing effectiveness of dexmedetomidine for adductor canal block in knee surgery are small. Also, its effectiveness has not been compared to Epinephrine which is a strong alpha and beta receptor agonist. In a previous study, we showed that motor sparing knee blocks significantly increased the duration of analgesia compared with periarticular knee infiltration using local anesthetic mixture containing Epinephrine following total knee arthroplasty (TKA). In this study, we compared two local anesthetic mixtures: one containing Dexmedetomidine and the other Epinephrine for prolongation of motor sparing knee block in primary TKA patients. After local ethics board approval and gaining Notice of Compliance (NOC) from Health Canada for use of Dexmedetomidine perineurally, 70 patients between the ages 18 – 95 of ASA class I to III undergoing unilateral primary total knee arthroplasty were enrolled. Motor sparing knee block − 1) Adductor canal continuous catheter 2) Single shot Lateral Femoral Cutaneous Nerve block 3) Single shot posterior knee infiltration was performed in all patients using 60 ml mixture of 0.5% Ropivacaine, 10 mg Morphine, 30 mg Ketorolac. Patients randomized into the Dexmedetomidine group (D) received, in addition to the mixture, 1mcg/kg Dexmedetomidine and the Epinephrine (E) group received 200mcg in the mixture. The primary outcome was time to first rescue analgesia as a surrogate for duration of analgesia and secondary outcomes were NRS pain scores up to 24 hours and opioid consumption. The time to first rescue analgesia was not significantly different between Epinephrine and dexmedetomidine groups, Mean and SD 18.45 ± 12.98 hours vs 16.63 ± 11.80 hours with a mean difference of 1.82 hours (95% CI −4.54 to 8.18 hours) and p value of 0.57. Pain scores at 4, 6, 12, 18 and 24 hours were comparable between groups. Mean NRS pain scores Epinephrine vs Dexmedetomidine groups were 1.03 vs 0.80 at 4 hours, 1.48 vs 3.03 at 6 hours, 3.97 vs 4.93 at 12 hours, 5.31 vs 6.18 and 6.59 v 6.12 at 24 hours. Opioid consumption was also not statistically significant between both groups at 6, 12 18, 24 hours (p values 0.18, 0.88, 0.09, 0.64 respectively). Dexmedetomidine does not prolong the duration of knee motor sparing blocks when compared to Epinephrine for total knee arthroplasty. Pain scores and opioid consumption was also comparable in both groups. Further studies using higher dose of dexmedetomidine are warranted


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 86-B, Issue SUPP_II | Pages 144 - 144
1 Feb 2004
Ho M Chang J Li C Wang G
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Introduction: Nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs) have been reported to suppress bone repair and remodeling in vivo. Our previous studies showed that NSAIDs inhibited osteoblast proliferation and induced cell death in fetal rat osteoblast cultures. However, the NSAIDs effects on the functions of human osteoblasts remain unclear. Newly developed selective cyclo-oxygenase 2 (COX-2) inhibitors, celecoxib and refecoxib, have been reported to have lower risk of gastrointestinal complications than traditional nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs. A recent report showed that refecoxib decreased bone ingrowth in an animal study. However, the effects of COX-2 selective inhibitors on human osteoblasts have rarely been investigated. In this study, the effects of steroid, non-selective, and selective COX-2 inhibitors on proliferation, cell cycle kinetics, and cytotoxicity in cultured human osteoblasts were examined. Materials and Methods: Indomethacin,ketorolac,piroxicam, and diclofenac (10. −5. and 10. −4. M); dexamethasone (10. −7. and 10. −6. M); Celecoxib and DFU, an analogue of rofecoxib, (10. −7. –10. −4. M) were tested for 24 or 48 hr in human osteoblast cultures. Results: In this study, we found that a 24 hour treatment of COX-2 selective inhibitors, celecoxib and DFU, significantly inhibited proliferation, arrested cell cycle, and had cytotoxicity in cultured human osteoblasts. However, the inhibitory effect on proliferation could be reversed if these agents were withdrawn for 24 hours. Indomethacin, ketorolac, diclofenac, and piroxicam also significantly inhibited proliferation and arrested cell cycle at the G. 0. /G. 1. phase, but had no cytotoxic effects on human osteoblasts. Discussion: These results suggest that the COX-2 selective and non-selective NSAIDs may affect osteoblastic functions through different mechanisms


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 99-B, Issue SUPP_15 | Pages 16 - 16
1 Aug 2017
Levine W
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Pain management following surgery continues to challenge patients, physician-extenders, and surgeons. A recent survey of 300 patients following surgery found that 86% experienced pain following surgery with 75% describing moderate or severe pain. Pain management in 2017 has to better address patient's needs as Pain has become the “5th Vital Sign” and is used in many patient reported outcomes (for better or worse). Multimodal therapy has been defined as “Synchronous administration of ≥ 2 pharmacological agents or approaches, each with a distinct mechanism of action”. Mounting evidence supports the use of a multimodal approach to peri-operative pain management in all surgical subspecialties. A recent systematic review of intravenous ketamine showed a reduction total opioid consumption and an increase in the time to first analgesic dose needed across all studies. Gabapentin and pregabalin have both been shown to dramatically reduce the use of opioid consumption by 30%. We have worked with our anesthesia team and developed a multimodal analgesia program that includes ketorolac 10mg 3 tabs po qd × 3 days, then 10mg 2 tabs po × 2 days; gabapentin 300mg (<65 year old) or 100mg (>65 year old) 3 tabs po × 3 days; oxycodone 5mg po q 4–6 hours prn breakthrough pain and Tylenol 500mg 1–2 tabs po q 6 hours prn


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 99-B, Issue SUPP_9 | Pages 57 - 57
1 May 2017
Salhab M Macdonald D Kimpson P Freeman J Stewart T Stone M
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Background. Hip arthroplasties are associated with high postoperative pain scores. In some reports, moderate to severe pain was 58% on the first day postoperatively in total hip replacements (THRs). Several techniques are currently used at our institution to tackle acute pain following THRs. These include: 1) Spinal anaesthetic (SA) with Diamorphine only; 2) General anaesthetic (GA) only; 3) SA with local infiltration anaesthetic mixture 1 (LIA1,). Mixture 1 consisted of ropivacaine, adrenaline, and ketorolac; 4) SA with LIA mixture 2 (LIA2). Mixture 2 consisted of bupivacaine and adrenaline; 5) SA with LIA1 and PainKwell pump system. In this study we report on the techniques of acute pain control following THR at our regional centre for elective primary THRs. Methods. Between June 2011 and July 2014, 173 consecutive patients undergoing primary THR using the posterior approach were prospectively followed up. Group 1. GA only. 31 patients, Group 2. SA only. 37 patients, Group 3. SA plus LIA1 only. 38 patients, Group 4. SA plus LIA2 only, 34 patients, Group 5. SA plus LIA1 plus PainKwell Pump System for 48 hours. 33 patients. Results. Fewer patients required opiate analgesia when LIA plus PainKwell pump system was used compared to the other groups. The highest significance was at 0–12 hrs for patients requiring up to 20mg morphine usage (χ2(2) = 46.713, p = 0.000); and 0–12hrs for patients requiring 30mg morphine usage (χ2(2) = 46.310, p = 0.000). There were no infections, DVTs or PEs in any group. One patient in group 3 suffered a stroke (ASA 4). A Kruskal-Wallis H test also showed that there was a statistically significant difference in morphine usage across groups 1, 2, 3, 4, and 5. Conclusion. We recommend the use of LIA with PainKwell pump system continuous infusion as an efficacious method to control pain following THR


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 98-B, Issue SUPP_22 | Pages 64 - 64
1 Dec 2016
Berend M
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Refinement of surgical techniques, anesthesia protocols, and patient selection has facilitated this transformation to same day discharge for arthroplasty care, most notably Partial Knee Arthroplasty (PKA). The trend for early discharge has already happened for procedures formerly regarded as “inpatient” procedures such as upper extremity surgery, arthroscopy, ACL reconstruction, foot and ankle procedures, and rotator cuff repair. Our program began focused on PKA and has now expanded to primary TKA and THA, and select revision cases. Over the past few years we have performed 1,230 knee arthroplasty procedures with no readmissions for pain control. Average age and age range is identical to our inpatient cohort for our partial knee cases. Patient selection is based on medical screening criteria and insurance access. PKA is the ideal procedure to begin your transition to the outpatient space. We currently perform medial PKA, lateral PKA, and patellofemoral arthroplasty as an outpatient. The program centers on the patient, their family, home recovery, preoperative education, efficient surgery, and represents a shift in the paradigm of arthroplasty care. It can be highly beneficial to patients, surgeons, anesthesia, facility costs, and payors as arthroplasty procedures shift to the outpatient space. Perhaps the most significant developments in joint replacement surgery in the past decade have been in the area of multimodal pain management. This has reduced length of stay in the inpatient hospital environment opening the opportunity for cost savings and even outpatient joint replacement surgery for appropriately selected patients. The hallmark of this program is meticulous protocol execution. Preemptive pain control with oral anti-inflammatory agents, gabapentin, regional anesthetic blocks that preserve quad function for TKA (adductor canal block) and pericapsular long acting local anesthetics with the addition of injectable ketorolac and IV acetaminophen are key adjuncts. Over the past two years utilizing this type of program over 60% of our partial knee replacement patients are now returning home the day of surgery. Concerns over readmission are appropriate. The rates of complications and readmissions are less than our inpatient cohort in appropriately selected cases with a standardised care map. We believe this brings the best VALUE to the patients, surgeons, and the arthroplasty system


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 98-B, Issue SUPP_17 | Pages 55 - 55
1 Nov 2016
Berend M
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Refinement of surgical techniques, anaesthesia protocols, and patient selection have facilitated this transformation to same day discharge for arthroplasty care, most notably Partial Knee Arthroplasty (PKR). The trend for early discharge has already happened for procedures formerly regarded as “inpatient” procedures such as upper extremity surgery, arthroscopy, ACL reconstruction, foot and ankle procedures, and rotator cuff repair. Our program began focused on Partial Knee Arthroplasty (PKA) and has now expanded to primary TKA and THA, and select revision cases. Over the past few years we have performed 1,230 Knee Arthroplasty procedures with no readmissions for pain control. Average age and age range is identical to our inpatient cohort for our partial knee cases. Patient selection is based on medical screening criteria and insurance access. PKA is the ideal procedure to begin your transition to the outpatient space. We currently perform medial PKA, lateral PKA, and patellofemoral arthroplasty as outpatient cases. The program centers on the patient, their family, home recovery, pre-operative education, efficient surgery, and represents a shift in the paradigm of arthroplasty care. It can be highly beneficial to patients, surgeons, anaesthesia, facility costs, and payors as arthroplasty procedures shift to the outpatient space. Perhaps the most significant developments in joint replacement surgery in the past decade have been in the area of multimodal pain management. This has reduced length of stay in the inpatient hospital environment opening the opportunity for cost savings and even outpatient joint replacement surgery for appropriately selected patients. The hallmark of this program is meticulous protocol execution. Pre-emptive pain control with oral anti-inflammatory agents, gabapentin, regional anesthetic blocks that preserve quad function for TKA (adductor canal block) and pericapsular long acting local anesthetics with the addition of injectable ketorolac and IV acetaminophen are key adjuncts. Over the past two years utilizing this type of program over 60% of our partial knee replacement patients are now returning home the day of surgery. Concerns over readmission are appropriate. The rates of complications and readmissions are less than our inpatient cohort in appropriately selected cases with a standardised care map. We believe this brings the best VALUE to the patients, surgeons, and the arthroplasty system


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 96-B, Issue SUPP_8 | Pages 111 - 111
1 May 2014
Berend M
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Perhaps the most significant developments in joint replacement surgery in the past decade have been in the area of multimodal pain management. This has reduced length of stay and opened the opportunity for cost savings and even outpatient joint replacement surgery for appropriately selected patients. The hallmark of this program is preemptive pain control with oral anti-inflammatory agents, gabapentin, regional anesthetic blocks that preserve quad function for TKA (adductor canal block) and long acting local anesthetics with the addition of injectable ketorolac and acetaminophen. Over the past two years utilising this type of program over 60% of our partial knee replacement patients are now returning home the day of surgery. We currently utilise a long acting local anesthetic delivery medication consisting of microscopic, spherical, lipid-based particles composed of a honeycomb-like structure of numerous nonconcentric internal aqueous chambers containing encapsulated bupivacaine separated from adjacent chambers by lipid membranes. Bupivacaine is released from the particles with diffusion of the drug over an extended period of time that more closely matches the time course of postsurgical pain following joint replacement surgery. Trials have demonstrated that a single dose administered via deep tissue infiltration is effective at reducing pain up to 72 hours


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 96-B, Issue SUPP_12 | Pages 35 - 35
1 Jul 2014
Berend M
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Perhaps the most significant developments in joint replacement surgery in the past decade have been in the area of multimodal pain management. This has reduced length of stay in the inpatient hospital environment opening the opportunity for cost savings and even outpatient joint replacement surgery for appropriately selected patients. The hallmark of this program is pre-emptive pain control with oral anti-inflammatory agents, gabapentin, regional anesthetic blocks that preserve quad function for TKA (adductor canal block) and pericapsular long acting time release local anesthetics with the addition of injectable ketorolac and IV acetaminophen. Over the past two years utilising this type of program over 60% of our partial knee replacement patients are now returning home the day of surgery. We currently utilise a long acting local anesthetic delivery medication consisting of microscopic, spherical, lipid-based particles composed of a honeycomb-like structure of numerous nonconcentric internal aqueous chambers containing encapsulated bupivacaine separated from adjacent chambers by lipid membranes. Bupivacaine is released from the particles with diffusion of the drug over an extended period of time that more closely matches the time course of postsurgical pain following joint replacement surgery. Trials have demonstrated that a single dose administered via deep tissue infiltration is effective at reducing pain up to 72 hours. This has been trialed in TKA as well


Bone & Joint Open
Vol. 3, Issue 9 | Pages 684 - 691
1 Sep 2022
Rodriguez S Shen TS Lebrun DG Della Valle AG Ast MP Rodriguez JA

Aims

The volume of ambulatory total hip arthroplasty (THA) procedures is increasing due to the emphasis on value-based care. The purpose of the study is to identify the causes for failed same-day discharge (SDD) and perioperative factors leading to failed SDD.

Methods

This retrospective cohort study followed pre-selected patients for SDD THA from 1 August 2018 to 31 December 2020. Inclusion criteria were patients undergoing unilateral THA with appropriate social support, age 18 to 75 years, and BMI < 37 kg/m2. Patients with opioid dependence, coronary artery disease, and valvular heart disease were excluded. Demographics, comorbidities, and perioperative data were collected from the electronic medical records. Possible risk factors for failed SDD were identified using multivariate logistic regression.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 99-B, Issue SUPP_7 | Pages 81 - 81
1 Apr 2017
Iorio R
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Pain control is critical in the management of TKA patients and is crucial to allow for early ambulation and accelerated physical therapy. Currently data suggests that 19% of patients are not satisfied with their results following TKA, and failure to control pain may result in prolonged hospitalization, worse outcomes, and increased patient dissatisfaction. Studies suggest that local analgesics coupled with both pre- and post-operative multimodal pain management may result in improved pain control and increased patient satisfaction. Minimization of opioid use is helpful in decreasing complications, accelerating physical therapy milestones, minimizing length of stay and increasing discharge to home. Femoral nerve blocks (FNB) can reduce pain scores for up to 48 hours post-operatively, but may delay ambulation and result in an increased rate of falls. Periarticular injection (PAI) with local analgesics can provide significant short term relief comparable to FNB and can also facilitate decreased opioid consumption. One commonly used local anesthetic is bupivacaine, but the average half-life of this drug is only 2.7 hours. An alternative to this for PAI during TKA is liposomal bupivacaine (LB). LB is a multivesicular drug designed for rapid absorption, prolonged release of bupivacaine, and analgesia that is maintained for up to 72 hours with a single injection. LB exhibits a bimodal peak of distribution, one immediate associated with extra-liposomal bupivacaine, and a second 10–36 hours later associated with the release of liposomal encapsulated bupivacaine. The safety profile of LB has been investigated and adverse events are similar to standard bupivacaine and demonstrate acceptable tolerability. Multiple studies have demonstrated efficacy of this drug compared to other pain control modalities. LB is highly technique dependent and only one piece of a multimodal pain management protocol. Our study consisted of 1808 consecutive primary TKA patients from Sept 2013 to Sept 2015. Three patient cohorts were compiled by date, from Sept 2013 to May 2014 was cohort 1, consisting of FNB and PCA. Department wide adoption of LB began in May 2014 and became routinely used in all patients undergoing total joint arthroplasty at our institution. Cohort 2 entailed a PCA along with LB injection from May 2014 through Feb 2015. Cohort 3 consisted of LB injection only and was from Feb 2015 through Sept 2015. All patients undergoing TKA were eligible and there were no exclusion criteria as long as the protocols were followed. The standard multi-modal analgesia protocol was provided to all patients in all three cohorts. Prior to entering the operating room, patients received preemptive oral analgesics, consisting of: 200 mg celecoxib, 1000 mg acetaminophen, and 50 mg pregabalin. Intra-operative analgesia was chosen at the discretion of the anesthesiologist and preferentially consisted of spinal anesthesia with general anesthesia as an alternate. For all three cohorts, a peri-incisional analgesic cocktail was injected prior to closure consisting of: 40 cc 0.25% Marcaine, 5 cc of (1 mg/cc) morphine, and 1 cc of (30 mg/cc) ketorolac. Cohorts 1 and 2 received PCA post-operatively for pain control post-operatively with prn oral narcotic administration as well. Cohort 3 did not receive a PCA. The cohort treated without FNB and without a PCA using a multimodal pain management protocol including a short acting periarticular injection and a longer acting periarticular injection with LB, had equivalent pain control, less narcotic use, faster achievement of physical therapy milestones, earlier and more frequent discharge home, less complications and a lower cost of the episode of care


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 91-B, Issue SUPP_III | Pages 502 - 502
1 Sep 2009
Arthur C Gorbachevski A Leeson-Payne C Breusch S
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Good perioperative analgesia following Total Knee Replacement facilitates rehabilitation and may reduce hospital stay. A multimodal drug injection has been shown to provide excellent pain control and functional recovery, and was introduced into the operating practice of one Arthroplasty surgeon during his Total Knee Replacements. We compared the rehabilitation of 27 consecutive patients (group 1) following their Total Knee Replacement under spinal anaesthesia receiving the periarticular infiltration mixture, consisting of levobupivacaine, ketorolac and adrenaline at the end of surgery. Their rehabilitation was compared to group 2, a historical group operated on by the same surgeon before the introduction of the multimodal drug injection. These patients were age and sex matched and had received a Femoral and Sciatic block at the time of their operation. Patients in group 1 had lower analgesic and anti-emetic requirements than group 2. Group 1 also had a shorter time to Strait Leg raise. Periarticular multimodal drug injection can improve perioperative analgesia and mobilisation following Total Knee Replacement as well as reducing opioid side effects