Efficacy of an Intravenous Bolus of Morphine 2.5 versus Morphine 7.5 mg for Procedural Pain Relief in Postoperative Cardiothoracic Patients in the Intensive Care Unit: A Randomised Double-Blind Controlled Trial

As pain in the intensive care unit (ICU) is still common despite important progress in pain management, we studied the efficacy of an intravenous bolus of morphine 2.5 vs 7.5 mg for procedural pain relief in patients after cardiothoracic surgery in the ICU. In a prospective double-blind randomised study, 117 ICU patients after cardiothoracic surgery were included. All patients were treated according a pain titration protocol for pain at rest, consisting of continuous morphine infusions and paracetamol, applied during the entire ICU stay. On the first postoperative day, patients were randomised to intravenous morphine 2.5 (n=59) or 7.5 mg (n=58) 30 minutes before a painful intervention (turning of patient and/or chest drain removal). Pain scores using the numeric rating scale (Numeric Rating Scale, range 0 to 10) were rated at rest (baseline) and around the painful procedure. At rest (baseline), overall incidence of unacceptable pain (Numeric Rating Scale ≥4) was low (Numeric Rating Scale >4; 14 vs 17%, P=0.81) for patients allocated to morphine 2.5 and 7.5 mg respectively. For procedure-related pain, there was no difference in incidence of unacceptable pain (28 vs 22%, P=0.53) mean pain scores (2.6 [95% confidence interval 2.0 to 3.2] vs 2.7 [95% confidence interval 2.0 to 3.4]) between patients receiving morphine 2.5 and 7.5 mg respectively. In intensive care patients after cardiothoracic surgery with low pain levels for pain at rest, there was no difference in efficacy between intravenous morphine 2.5 mg or morphine 7.5 mg for pain relief during a painful intervention.

[1]  L. van Gulik,et al.  Improved analgesia after the realisation of a pain management programme in ICU patients after cardiac surgery , 2010, European journal of anaesthesiology.

[2]  B. Kavanagh,et al.  Protocolized Intensive Care Unit Management of Analgesia, Sedation, and Delirium Improves Analgesia and Subsyndromal Delirium Rates , 2010, Anesthesia and analgesia.

[3]  J. Payen,et al.  Pain Assessment Is Associated with Decreased Duration of Mechanical Ventilation in the Intensive Care Unit: A Post Hoc Analysis of the DOLOREA Study , 2009, Anesthesiology.

[4]  B. Walder,et al.  Reducing pain in patients undergoing cardiac surgery after implementation of a quality improvement postoperative pain treatment program. , 2008, Journal of critical care.

[5]  B. Riou,et al.  Intravenous morphine titration to treat severe pain in the ED. , 2008, The American journal of emergency medicine.

[6]  D. Tibboel,et al.  Comparison of different pain scoring systems in critically ill patients in a general ICU , 2008, Critical care.

[7]  Procedural pain – Time for its recognition and treatment! , 2008, European journal of pain.

[8]  T. Shaw,et al.  Patients' self-report of procedural pain in the intensive care unit. , 2007, Journal of clinical nursing.

[9]  J. Payen,et al.  Current Practices in Sedation and Analgesia for Mechanically Ventilated Critically Ill Patients: A Prospective Multicenter Patient-based Study , 2007, Anesthesiology.

[10]  B. Krauss,et al.  Procedural sedation and analgesia research: state of the art. , 2007, Academic emergency medicine : official journal of the Society for Academic Emergency Medicine.

[11]  H. Kokki,et al.  Pain after Cardiac Surgery: A Prospective Cohort Study of 1-Year Incidence and Intensity , 2006, Anesthesiology.

[12]  Jean-Yves Lefrant,et al.  Impact of systematic evaluation of pain and agitation in an intensive care unit* , 2006, Critical care medicine.

[13]  M. Fox,et al.  A Randomized Comparison of Three Methods of Analgesia for Chest Drain Removal in Postcardiac Surgical Patients , 2005, Anesthesia and analgesia.

[14]  K. Puntillo,et al.  Appropriately timed analgesics control pain due to chest tube removal. , 2004, American journal of critical care : an official publication, American Association of Critical-Care Nurses.

[15]  F. Wood,et al.  A randomised crossover trial of patient controlled intranasal fentanyl and oral morphine for procedural wound care in adult patients with burns. , 2004, Burns : journal of the International Society for Burn Injuries.

[16]  P. Coriat,et al.  Relationships between Measurement of Pain Using Visual Analog Score and Morphine Requirements during Postoperative Intravenous Morphine Titration , 2003, Anesthesiology.

[17]  J. Katz,et al.  Age differences in postoperative pain are scale dependent: a comparison of measures of pain intensity and quality in younger and older surgical patients , 2003, PAIN®.

[18]  E John Gallagher,et al.  Validation of a verbally administered numerical rating scale of acute pain for use in the emergency department. , 2003, Academic emergency medicine : official journal of the Society for Academic Emergency Medicine.

[19]  C. Sessler,et al.  The Richmond Agitation-Sedation Scale: validity and reliability in adult intensive care unit patients. , 2002, American journal of respiratory and critical care medicine.

[20]  Philip D Lumb,et al.  Clinical practice guidelines for the sustained use of sedatives and analgesics in the critically ill adult. , 2002, Critical care medicine.

[21]  J. Vender,et al.  Anxiety, delirium, and pain in the intensive care unit. , 2001, Critical care clinics.

[22]  J. Stanik-Hutt,et al.  Patients' perceptions and responses to procedural pain: results from Thunder Project II. , 2001, American journal of critical care : an official publication, American Association of Critical-Care Nurses.

[23]  M. Murray,et al.  Analgesia and sedation in critically ill patients , 2001 .

[24]  M. Pinaud,et al.  The Efficacy of Intravenous 0.15 Versus 0.25 mg/kg Intraoperative Morphine for Immediate Postoperative Analgesia After Remifentanil-Based Anesthesia for Major Surgery , 2000, Anesthesia and analgesia.

[25]  R. Salamon,et al.  Risk factors and outcome in European cardiac surgery: analysis of the EuroSCORE multinational database of 19030 patients. , 1999, European journal of cardio-thoracic surgery : official journal of the European Association for Cardio-thoracic Surgery.

[26]  R. Hamill-Ruth,et al.  Evaluation of pain in the critically ill patient. , 1999, Critical care clinics.

[27]  K. Todd,et al.  Clinical significance of reported changes in pain severity. , 1996, Annals of emergency medicine.

[28]  B. Kavanagh,et al.  Acute pain after thoracic surgery predicts long-term post-thoracotomy pain. , 1996, The Clinical journal of pain.

[29]  K. Puntillo Dimensions of procedural pain and its analgesic management in critically ill surgical patients. , 1994, American journal of critical care : an official publication, American Association of Critical-Care Nurses.

[30]  S. Braver,et al.  The measurement of clinical pain intensity: a comparison of six methods , 1986, Pain.

[31]  J. Atkinson,et al.  Measurement of pain: Patient preference does not confound pain measurement , 1981, Pain.