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Question #1. What is the analgesic of choice for mild to moderate knee pain due to osteoarthritis in a 78 year old female patient? Acetaminophen Aspirin Celocoxib Propoxyphene Tramadol. Question #2.
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Question #1 What is the analgesic of choice for mild to moderate knee pain due to osteoarthritis in a 78 year old female patient? • Acetaminophen • Aspirin • Celocoxib • Propoxyphene • Tramadol
Question #2 You are in the ED treating a 78 year old female patient with a history of breast cancer treated 7 years prior with surgery, chemotherapy, and radiation. She complains of severe, unrelenting pain in her low back without radicular symptoms or bowel or bladder dysfunction. The pain has been present for 3 months as a nagging ache, but, for the past 3 days, it has been unbearable. Her BP is 150/100, pulse 105, RR 18, Temp 98.8, pulse ox 96% on room air. What is the appropriate intravenous dose of morphine in mgs per kilogram of body weight to treat her pain? • 0.01 mg/kg • 0.05 mg/kg • 0.10 mg/kg • 1.00 mg/kg • 2.50 mg/kg
Question #3 Which of the following classifications best describes pain in the elderly resulting from inflammation, musculoskeletal, or ischemic disorders? • Limbic system mediated • Nocioceptive • Neuropathic • Parasympathetic mediated • Sympathetic mediated
Acute And Chronic Pain Management In The Elderly Henry R. Schuitema, D.O., FACOEP Medical Director Department of Emergency Medicine Kennedy Health Systems Stratford Campus
Acute And Chronic Pain Management In The Elderly This Care of the Aging Medical Patient in the Emergency Room(CAMPER) presentation is offered by the Department of Emergency Medicine in coordination with the New Jersey Institute for Successful Aging. This lecture series is supported by an educational grant from the Donald W. Reynolds Foundation Aging and Quality of Life program.
Learning Objectives • Perform a comprehensive, multi-dimensional assessment of the elderly patient presenting to the ED with acute or chronic pain • Evaluate for untreated pain as the causative factor of agitation or delirium in older patients • Increase awareness of untreated pain and use of non-verbal cues in agitated elderly patients with impairments in hearing, speech and cognitive function • Identify both rapidly and accurately the patient’s goals of care and develop an appropriate, patient-centered plan of treatment for pain control
Learning Objectives, Cont. • Discuss safety measures for the prevention of common ED iatrogenic pain complications from indwelling Foley catheters, central line placement, and endotracheal intubation • Prescribe and appropriately dose medications for the treatment of acute or chronic pain • Exercise caution when prescribing analgesic medications that increase morbidity in older patients • Manage opioid related side effects
Case 1 • 79 year old woman presents with newly diagnosed recurrent metastatic breast cancer to bone and liver with underlying COPD. Her COPD has progressed over recent years leaving her oxygen and steroid dependent. • Her recent pathologic hip fracture results in daily pain and her dyspnea is difficult to control. • She is weakened by chronic anemia from PUD. • Constipation and anxiety are daily concerns.
Aging In The United States • 1900 – 3.1 million elderly • 2000 – 35 million elderly • 2020 – 54 million elderly **Incidence of pain increases as we age
What Is Pain • An unpleasant sensory and emotional experience associated with actual or potential tissue damage • Pain is whatever the person experiencing it says it is • “Discomfort Management”
Oligoanalgesia • The failure to recognize/treat pain • Risk factors • Advanced Age • Minorities • Failure to detect • Joint Commission – “5th Vital Sign”
Reason For Oligoanalgesia • Lack of training • Inappropriate pain assessment • Reluctance to prescribe opioids
Consequences Of Untreated Pain • Negatively impact on quality of life • Depression and anxiety • Social isolation • Cognitive impairment • Sleep disturbances
Pain ManagementProvider Responsibilities • Pain relief is a moral and ethical professional responsibility • Providers must help patients make their own decisions and determine their own actions • Assessment focused on individual as a whole person and their response to pain
Pain Assessment Tools • The Brief Pain Inventory • Measures severity of pain • Degree to which it interferes with life • Pain Severity • Worst Pain • Least Pain • Average Pain • Pain Now • Interference • Relations with others • Enjoyment of life • Mood • Sleep • Walking • General Activity • Working
Pain Assessment • The Short Form McGill Pain Questionnaire • Descriptor of pain graded on a scale 0,1,2,3 • Present Pain Intensity on scale 0-5
Pain Assessment • Assessment in the ED must be rapid • Report of pain intensity and other descriptors • Past pain history and medication history • Ongoing monitoring of pain intensity, duration, response • Comprehensive assessment should be delayed
Obstacles To Pain Assessment • Older patients fail to report pain (they view it as part of aging, don’t want more testing and medications) • Accept as punishment for past actions • Frequently deny pain – use terms like aching or sore • Communication and cognitive status
Classification Of Pain • Nociceptive • Neuropathic • Combination
Nociceptive Pain • Visceral or Somatic • Stimulation of pain receptors • Inflammation, musculoskeletal, ischemic disorders • Typically respond to both opioid and non-opioid therapy (and other non-pharmacologic treatment)
Neuropathic Pain • Pathophysiologic disturbance of peripheral and central nervous system • Examples: Post-herpetic neuralgia and diabetic neuropathy • Respond better to anticonvulsants and antidepressants • Pain of mixed origins – combination therapy
Management Of Acute Pain • Combination of opioid/non-opioid analgesics • Addition of adjunct medications • Non-pharmacologic interventions
Pharmacologic Management Of Pain In Elderly • Principal treatment modality for pain • Significant adverse drug reactions • Drug/drug and drug/disease interactions • Typically requires trials of various agents
Pharmacologic ManagementGeneral Principles • Non-opioid mild pain • Opioids for severe pain • Select the agent that targets the issue • Neuropathic – anticonvulsants • Start Low and GO Slow
Non-Opioid Analgesics • Mild to moderate musculoskeletal pain • Acetaminophen • no effect platelet aggregation • no anti-inflammatory properties • well tolerated if no renal/hepatic failure • do not exceed 2 gm/day
Non-Opioid Analgesia • NSAIDS • Significant Risk in Elderly • GI Bleeding • Platelet dysfunction • Impaired coagulation • Prolonged use in elderly should be avoided
Opioid Analgesia Cornerstone of acute pain management • Proper drug selection • Route of administration • Initial dose • Frequency of administration • Adjunct agent • Side effects
Opioid Potency • Fentanyl • Hydromorphone • Morphine • Oxycodone
Route Of Administration • Intravenous preferred route • Intramuscular should be avoided • Inhaled very effective • Oral mainstay in ambulatory ED setting • Transdermal great outpatient
Dose And Frequency • Start low and go slow!!! • Elderly at risk oligoanalgesia and pharmaco-complications • Many elderly opioid naïve
Adjunct Agents/Side Effects • Anticipate, prevent, manage • Nausea and itching • Over-sedation • Prophylactic bowel regimens • Avoid chewing/crushing sustained release products
Specific Painful Conditions • Head Injuries • Migraines • Chest Pain • Abdominal Pain • Fracture/Dislocations
Painful Procedures • Foley Catheters • Central Venous Access • Endotracheal Intubation • Cardioversion
Chronic Pain • Painful condition lasting longer than 3 months • 4 types • Pain persisting beyond normal healing time • Pain relating to chronic degenerative disease • Cancer related pain • Pain without identifiable cause
Chronic PainGoals Of Therapy • Pain reduction • Return to functional status
Epidemiology Of Chronic Pain • 1/3 of population affected • Caused by chronic pathologic process to organ system • Caused by prolonged dysfunction of peripheral/central nervous system • Frequently psychiatric issues in play
Psychological CharacteristicsOf Chronic Pain Patients • Misuse of narcotics • Tendency to “Doctor shop” • Bodily impairment related to physical/emotional factors • Inability to work • Feeling of helplessness • Over-dramatization • Despair and negative attitudes
Objective Findings Of Chronic Pain • Muscle atrophy • Skin temperature changes • Trigger points
Chronic Pain And Treatment • Management is controversial • Opioids should only be used if they enhance function • Single practitioner should be sole prescriber • Narcotics are effective and recommended for cancer pain • NSAIDS helpful but problematic in elderly
Chronic Pain And Anti-Depressants • Very effective • Lower doses needed compared to depression • TCA enhance endogenous pain inhibitory mechanisms • Used in conjunction with private physician
Chronic Pain And Anticonvulsants • Effective Neuropathic Pain • Prevent burst of action potentials • Helps lancinating pain • Carbamazepine, valproic acid frequently used
Chronic Pain • Muscle relaxants • Anxiolytics • Tramadol
Special Pain PresentationsPost Herpetic Neuralgia • Follow acute course herpes zoster • Characterized by shooting, lancinating pain • Frequently have hyperesthesia • Narcotics, antidepressants
Special Pain PresentationsFibromyalgia • 11 of 18 specific tender points • Muscle stiffness, generalized aching pain • Sleeplessness • Narcotics, short course NSAIDS, antidepressants, exercise
Special Pain PresentationNeurogenic Back Pain • Very common with advanced age • Frequently associated with neuropathy • Narcotics, tapered steroids, muscle relaxants
Treating Cancer Pain • Pain is cancer's most disturbing symptom • Aggressive pain management can relieve >90% • Pain management remains poor • Long acting narcotics scheduled with bursts for breakthrough pain
Drug Seeking Behavior in Elderly • Not well studied • Prescription drug abuse increasing • It knows no boundaries • Substance abuse by “family members”
Most Common Abuse Presentations • Back Pain • Headache • Extremity Pain • Dental Pain
Case 1 • 79 year old woman presents with newly diagnosed recurrent metastatic breast cancer to bone and liver with underlying COPD. Her COPD has progressed over recent years leaving her oxygen and steroid dependent. • Her recent pathologic hip fracture results in daily pain and her dyspnea is difficult to control. • She is weakened by chronic anemia from PUD. • Constipation and anxiety are daily concerns.