학술논문

Prediction of Pain and Opioid Utilization in the Perioperative Period in Patients Undergoing Primary Knee Arthroplasty: Psychophysical and Psychosocial Factors
Document Type
article
Source
Pain Medicine. 20(1)
Subject
Prevention
Patient Safety
Chronic Pain
Neurosciences
Clinical Research
Pain Research
Arthritis
Musculoskeletal
Acute Pain
Aged
Analgesics
Opioid
Arthroplasty
Replacement
Knee
Cohort Studies
Female
Humans
Male
Middle Aged
Neuralgia
Pain Measurement
Pain
Postoperative
Perioperative Period
Quantitative Sensory Testing
Total Knee Arthroplasty
predictors of acute pain
Postoperative Pain
Chronic Post-Surgical Pain
Clinical Sciences
Pharmacology and Pharmaceutical Sciences
Public Health and Health Services
Anesthesiology
Language
Abstract
Objective:To identify factors associated with pain severity and opioid consumption in the early perioperative period. Design:Prospective observational cohort study. Setting:Tertiary academic medical center. Subjects:Patients with osteoarthritis older than age 45 years undergoing primary total knee replacement at Brigham and Women's Hospital. A total of 126 patients enrolled. Methods:Preoperatively, pain questionnaires and quantitative sensory testing were performed on patients to develop a psychosocial and psychophysical profile. Postoperatively, pain scores and opioid consumption were measured as primary end points. Univariate and multiple linear regression analyses were performed to determine the predictive value of these characteristics on perioperative pain scores and opioid consumption. Results:Regression analysis revealed several predictors of acute postoperative pain scores including temporal summation of pain (TSP; P = 0.001), body mass index (BMI; P = 0.044), number of previous knee surgeries (P = 0.006), and female gender (P = 0.023). Similarly, predictors of opioid utilization included TSP (P = 0.011), BMI (P = 0.02), age (P =