Study Design. Epidural infusion was compared with standard patient-controlled analgesia (PCA) in 50 patients after surgical correction of adolescent idiopathic scoliosis with respect to certain postoperative parameters. Objectives. To compare postoperative parameters after posterior spinal instrumentation and fusion (PSIF) and to determine whether epidural infusion prolongs hospital stay or increases the risk of complications. Summary of Background Data. Patient-controlled analgesia and epidural infusion are both safe and effective in controlling postoperative pain after PSIF. One criticism of epidural infusion has been longer hospital stays. No study was found in the literature in which PCA was compared with epidural infusion. Methods. The records of 50 consecutive patients who had undergone PSIF were reviewed. The epidural group consisted of 30 patients and the PCA group 20. Age, weight, degree of curve, and levels fused were evenly matched. Postoperative parameters including the day that each patient tolerated a full diet, day of independent ambulation, length of hospital stay, and pain control were compared. Results. Pain control was comparable in each group. The epidural group tolerated a full diet earlier and on average were discharged 0.5 days sooner than the PCA group. Both differences are statistically significant. No significant complications were reported in either group. Conclusions. Epidural infusion of opioids with bupivacaine is safe and effective for controlling postoperative pain after PSIF without an increased complication rate when compared with PCA. In the current study, patients tolerated a full diet and were discharged from the hospital an average of 0.5 days earlier than PCA-treated patients.
[1]
R. Sittl,et al.
[Management of postoperative pain in children].
,
2000,
Schmerz.
[2]
L. Haugh,et al.
Epidural analgesia for postoperative pain control in children.
,
1998,
Journal of pediatric orthopedics.
[3]
J. T. Smith,et al.
Postoperative epidural analgesia for pediatric spine surgery.
,
1998,
Orthopedics.
[4]
B. Shaw,et al.
The safety of continuous epidural infusion for postoperative analgesia in pediatric spine surgery.
,
1996,
Journal of pediatric orthopedics.
[5]
J. Ogden,et al.
Epidural versus patient-controlled analgesia with morphine for postoperative pain after orthopaedic procedures in children.
,
1993,
Journal of pediatric orthopedics.
[6]
R. Chioléro,et al.
A randomized comparison of intravenous versus lumbar and thoracic epidural fentanyl for analgesia after thoracotomy.
,
1992,
Anesthesiology.
[7]
J. Andrish,et al.
Efficacy of intermittent epidural morphine following posterior spinal fusion in children and adolescents.
,
1989,
Clinical orthopaedics and related research.
[8]
A. Ivankovich,et al.
Continuous thoracic epidural analgesia for postoperative pain relief following thoracotomy: a randomized prospective study.
,
1987,
Anesthesiology.