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Title: Pain%20management%20in%20the%20Pediatric%20%20%20Emergency%20Department


1
Pain management in the Pediatric Emergency
Department
  • Itai Shavit, MD
  • Alberta Childrens Hospital November 2001

2
Objectives
  • 1. Pain in children Perception, Myths, Attitudes
    and Ethics
  • 2. Pediatric pain assessment
  • 3. Pediatric Procedural Sedation and Analgesia
    (PSA)
  • 4. Narcotic analgesia in acute abdomen
  • 5. Topical analgesia
  • 6. Neonatal Sucrose analgesia
  • 7. AAP, September 2001 guidelines
  • 8. Summary

3
Pain in children Perception, Myths, Attitudes
and Ethics
4
The definition of pain
  • An unpleasant sensory or emotional experience
    associated with actual or potential tissue
    damage, or described in terms of such damage
    (International Association for the study of Pain
    IASP,1979)
  • Does the human neonate capable of perceiving pain
    ????

5
The concept of pain perception
  • In the eighties, Premature infants who had major
    surgeries were treated with minimal anesthesia
    during and after the surgery (normal standard)
  • Pain and its effects in the human neonate and
    fetus.1987, NEJM. Landmark seminar paper. Anand
    and Hickley Called into question the widely
    held belief that neonates do not have the
    Neurophysiologic apparatus required to experience
    pain

6
AAP APS policy statement, 09/2001
  • The concepts of pain and suffering go well
    beyond that of a simple sensory experience. It
    has emotional, cognitive, and behavioral
    components as well as developmental,
    environmental and sociocultural aspects
    (AAP and American Pain
    Society policy statement, September, 2001)

7
Myths
  • Myth 1 Babies dont feel pain
  • Myth 2 Babies dont remember
  • Myth 3
    My son doesnt
    need pain killers
    No pain
    no gain,
    Pain is character building

8
Myth 1 Babies dont feel pain...
Babies do experience pain!
9
  • By 29 wks of gestation, pain pathways and
    cortical sub-cortical centers involved in the
    perception of pain are well developed, as are the
    Neurological systems for the transmission and
    modulation of pain sensation
  • Pain sensitivity in neonates may be more profound
    that that of older individuals their nervous
    system may be less effective at blocking painful
    stimuli than those of adults

10
Myth 2 They dont remember...
Babies do remember pain!
11
  • Effect of neonatal circumcision on pain response
    during subsequent routine vaccination. 1997,
    Lancet. Taddio, Kats, Ilersich,
    Koren
  • Does neonatal circumcision alter pain response at
    4-month or 6-month vaccination compared with the
    response of uncircumcised infants?
  • Prospective. cohort design. 87 patients.
  • 3 groups uncircumcised infants, circumcised
    infants who had randomly pretreated with either
    EMLA cream or Placebo for circumcision in a
    previous clinical trial

12
  • All infants were videotaped during vaccination in
    a primary care clinic. Videotapes were blindly
    scored by a trained research assistant. The score
    measured facial action, cry duration and visual
    analogue scale
  • Results Circumcised infants showed a stronger
    pain response to subsequent routine vaccination
    than uncircumcised infants. Among the circumcised
    group, preoperative treatment with EMLA
    attenuated the pain response to vaccination
  • The pain itself may not be consciously remembered
    but the painful experience does

13
  • Consequences of inadequate Analgesia during
    painful procedures in childen. 1998, Arch Ped
    Adolesc Med. Weisman, Bernstein, Schechter
  • How does inadequate Analgesia for painful
    procedures (BMA, ST) effect pain response in
    subsequent procedures?
  • Cohort study, randomized, placebo control
    (Placebo vs Oral Transmucosal Fentanyl), small
    sample
  • Young children (lt8y) who received placebo in
    previous procedure had consistently higher pain
    scores than children who had proper analgesia

14
Myth 3 Pain is character building
Pain is not character building, it has a
negative influence on children !
15
  • This statement is unfair. It legitimizes pain and
    takes away the childs right for pain relief
  • Children younger than 8 years are not able to
    understand that short term pain may have long
    term benefit
  • Adolescents who had poorly managed pain
    procedures show increased level of anxiety in
    subsequent pain situations
  • Pain is a subjective experience and is
    incomparable. There is no direct relationship
    between pain experience and pain intensity or
    between physical pathology and pain intensity

16
Our fear of Analgesia...
  • Masking of symptoms and signs
  • Changes in the exam
  • Side effects and complications

17
Ethics
  • The Ethics of pain control in Infants and
    children. Walco GA, Cassidy RC, Schechter NL,
    NEJM, 1994331(8)541-43
  • The assessment and treatment of pain in
    children are important parts of Pediatric
    practice, and failure to provide adequate control
    of pain amounts to substandard and unethical
    medical practice

18
Short term effects of inadequate pain management
  • Significant fluctuations in HR, BP, ICP, Oxygen
    level, and stress hormones level
  • Sleep disturbances, agitation, crying

Long term effects of inadequate pain management
  • Inadequate surgical pain management has more
    clinical complications, prolonged hospitalization
    time and higher mortality rates
  • Behavioral and Psychological sequaela

19
Pediatric pain assessment
20
  • Weve all experienced pain
  • Anxiety decreases pain threshold

21
Pediatric pain assessment scales
  • Inability to verbalize pain appropriately under 2
    years of age. At age 3-7 most children are
    competent to provide accurate information (using
    assessment tools)
  • Pain is a subjective experience therefore
    individual self report is favored (AAP
    recommendation)
  • Behavioral pain measures are more useful than
    physiological parameters. Physiologic parameters
    are unreliable

22
Pediatric pain assessment scales
Pain Assessment tools
  • 0-2 Years Neonatal Infant Pain Scale, Premature
    Infant Pain Profile, Neonatal Infant Pain Scale,
    DAN score
  • 3-7 years old FACES pain rating scale, OUCHER
    Scale
  • 7lt years old Verbal Report Scale, Visual Analog
    Scale

23
Neonatal pain assessment
Facial expression Eyes squeeze Brow
bulge Nasolabial furrow Vocal expression
24
Circumcision
25
DAN score Acute pain rating scale in neonates
(Douleur Aigue du Nouuveau-ne, 1997)
Facial expression Calm (0), Snivels and
alternates gentle eye openining and closing (1),
Determine intensity of one or or more of eyes
squeeze, brow bulge, nasolabial furrow Mild,
intermittent with return to calm (2), Moderate
(3), Very pronounced, continuous (4)
Limb movements Calm or gentle movements (0),
Determine intensity of one or more of the
following signspedals, toes spread, legs tensed
and pulled up, agitation of arms, withdrawal
reaction Mild, intermittent with return to calm
(2), Moderate (3), Very pronounced, continuous
(4)
Vocal expression No complaints (0), Moans
briefly for intubated child, looks anxious or
uneasy (1), Intermittent crying for intubated
child, gesticulations of intermittent crying (2),
Long lasting crying, continuous howl, for
intubated child, gesticulations of continuous
crying
26
FACES pain rating scale (3-7 years)

The Wong Baker Scale
27
OUCHER scale (3-7 years)
Categorical
  • Available in versions for males and females and
    in multicultural forms. The child is asked to
    point to the picture that best shows how he or
    she feels

28
Verbal Report Scale (gt7 years)
Categorical
  • On a scale of 0 to 10, with 0 being no pain
    and 10 being the worst pain ever, how would you
    rate your pain?

29
Visual Analog Scale (gt7 years)
Non categorical
  • A straight line. The left end of the line
    representing no pain and the right end of the
    line representing the worst pain. Patients are
    asked to mark on the line where they think their
    pain is

30
Visual Analog Scale (gt7 years)
Non categorical
The greatest pain imaginable
No pain
31
Pediatric procedural analgesia
32
Guidelines for Pediatric procedural sedation and
analgesia
  • Sedation and Analgesia for procedures in children
    2001,NEJM. Krauss, Green
  • Management of acute pain and anxiety in children
    undergoing procedures in the Emergency
    Department. 2001, Pediatric Emergency Care.
    Krauss
  • Pharmacological Management of pain and anxiety
    during Emergency procedures in children. 2001,
    Paediatric Drugs. Kennedy, Luhmann

33
Terminology
  • 12 different definitions for state of sedation.
    Most of them are based on the degree of sedation
    induced rather than the specific indication for
    sedation
  • Only 4 are applicable for children

34
Conscious Sedation, AAP, 1992
  • A medically controlled state of depressed
    consciousness that 1. Allows protective reflexes
    to be maintained. 2.
    Retains the patient ability to maintain a patient
    airway independently and continuously

    3. Permits appropriate response by the patient
    to physical stimulation or verbal command, e.g.,
    open your eyes.

35
Deep Sedation, AAP, 1992
  • A medically controlled state of depressed
    consciousness or unconsciousness from which the
    patient is not easily aroused. It may be
    accompanied by a partial or complete loss of
    protective reflexes, and includes the inability
    to maintain a patent airway independently and
    respond purposefully to physical stimulation or
    verbal command.

36
General Anesthesia, AAP, 1992
  • A medically controlled state of depressed
    consciousness accompanied by a loss of reflexes
    including the inability to maintain a patent
    airway independently and respond purposefully to
    physical stimulation or verbal command

37
Procedural Sedation and Analgesia (PSA),
ACEP, 1998
  • A Technique of administering sedatives or
    dissociative agents with or without analgesics to
    induce a state that allows the patient to
    tolerate unpleasant procedures while maintaining
    cardiorespiratory function. Procedural sedation
    and analgesia is intended to result in a
    depressed level of consciousness but one that
    allows the patient to maintain airway control
    independently and continuously. Specifically, the
    drugs, doses, and techniques used are not likely
    to produce a loss of protective airway reflexes.
  • Significant improvement over the traditional AAP
    terminology

38
Precautions
  • Midazolam

    Reduce dose when used in combination with Opioids
  • Ketamine

    Higher risk for hallucinations gt 15y, may be
    blunted with Midazolam . Adding Midazolam to
    Ketamine in children younger than 15y appears to
    be unnecessary (Sherwin et al, Ann Em Med, 2000)
  • Hypersalivation can be minimized with Atropine
    (poor evidence)
  • Fentanyl

    Reduce dose when combined with Midazolam

39
Ultra-Short acting medications
  • Propofol
    Currently not
    (yet) recommended for PSA in children. High risk
    for apnea and loss of airway reflexes. No
    analgesic effect. Insufficient data (only one
    study in children)
  • Etomidate, Methohexital
    Insufficient data in
    children for safety and reliability

40
Oral/Intranasal medications for PSA
  • Oral Transmucosal Fentanyl (lozengens)
    High rate of emesis
    (gt30)
  • Intranasal Sufentanyl
    Insufficient
    data on safety and efficacy in children. 7 times
    more potent than Fentanyl. With Midazolam for
    lacerations. The nasal delivery is painless, no
    vomiting . Mean time to sedation 20 min,
    discharge time 54 min. Expensive.
  • Oral Ketamine
    Insufficient
    data. Optimum oral dose for safe and reliable
    sedation for PSA has to be determined.
    Long discharge time
    (100 min)

41
Antagonists
  • Naloxon

    Introduced in 1960, proven to be safe in
    children. Opioid
    antagonist of choice for PSA
  • Flumazenil

    Introduced in 1987, proven to be safe in children
  • Nalmefen

    New Opioid antagonist, Introduced in 1995,
    proven to be useful in adults. Long acting
    (3.5h).
  • Only one study in children (Nov 2001, Ann Em
    Med) Patients who had PSA with
    Fentanyl/Midazolam received Nalmefen after the
    procedure. Sedation reversal parameters were
    improved, no side effects, no cardiorespiratory
    changes, no resedation phenomena. Nalmefen seems
    to be effective in children. (small sample)

42
Narcotic analgesia in the pediatric acute abdomen
43
Narcotic analgesia in acute abdomen
  • The Ethical dilemma of withholding analgesia
    while awaiting surgical evaluation
  • 4 prospective randomized controlled double blind
    studies in adults, no studies in children
  • All 4 studies use Morphine sulfate or Morphine
    derivatives

44
Narcotic analgesia in acute abdomen
  • In all studies, opiates didnt change management
    and were not found to be associated with
    increased morbidity or mortality. None of the
    trials was able to identify even one patient in
    which analgesia led to a poor outcome
  • In adults the use of narcotic analgesia doesnt
    mask symptoms or change the physical exam
    findings
  • In children there is no data

45
Topical analgesia
46
Needlephobia
  • Topical anesthetics do not reduce needlephobia
  • Coping strategies used by parents proved to
    significantly reduce stress (e.g. favorite toy,
    books, singing songs)
  • Both child and parents have to be fully aware of
    what is going to occur and the reasons why

47
EMLA
  • For IV cannulation and lumbar puncture. Not
    recommended for IM injection or heel prick in
    neonates
  • Mixture of 2.5 lidocaine and 2.5 prilocaine in
    a cream base. The specific concentration gradient
    promote penetration of intact skin
  • Application under an occlusive dressing. Depth of
    anesthesia ranges from 3mm after 60 min (onset to
    pick effect), to 5 mm after 90

48
EMLA
  • Should be placed on skin for at list 60 min.
    Changing Triage protocols?
  • Safe. Recently been approve to for use in
    newborns.
  • Single dose does not cause Methemoglobinemia
    (Prilocaine side effect)

49
Tetracaine cream
Ametop Gel (Smith Nephew 1997)
  • 4 Tetracaine cream (Amethocaine)
  • Applied under occlusive dressing
  • Rapid onset of action (30 to 40 min)
  • Provide anesthesia for up to 4 hours
  • Should not be used in neonates (irritation, even
    blistering)

50
Lidocaine injection
  • Subcutaneously injected buffered lidocaine 1
    (1/10 with Bicarbonate solution of 1meq/ml) using
    30-gauge needle, reduces struggling during LPs
    in newborns
  • EMLA or Ametop (gt1mo) prior the procedure if
    possible
  • Buffering decreases onset time for analgesia
    without affecting efficacy or duration
  • To reduce pain Distract the patient, use
    buffered lidocaine, use 30 (for infants) or 27
    gauge needle, warm the anesthetic to body
    temperature prior administration, avoid
    intradermal injection

51
Neonatal analgesia
52
Analgesia for minor invasive procedures in
neonates
(Neonates usually suffer more than one poke)
  • Acetaminophen?
  • Not effective in controlling neonatal procedural
    pain
  • Ibuprofen?
  • Its safety under 6 months of age hasnt been
    established
  • Codeine?
  • Codeine requires the conversion to its active
    component, Morphine. This enzymatic conversion
    activity is lt10 of that seen in adults

53
Sucrose analgesia
54
  • Since 1991, 14 RO,CO,BL studies were published
  • All studies found sucrose to be safe and
    effective in reducing neonatal procedural pain
    (using various neonatal pain rating scales)

  • most studies used 24 sucrose, 30 sucrose or 30
    glucose

55
  • Sucrose elicits analgesia in neonates when
    administered prior to a painful procedure

56
The phenomenon of sucrose analgesia
  • Infant rats showed attenuated pain response when
    given intraoral infusions of sugar (1987, Blass
    et al,Pharmacol Biochem Behav)
  • 1991, Blass Hoffmeyer, Pediatrics. First report
    in neonates. 24 Sucrose solution proved to
    attenuate pain, especially when given with
    pacifier (Circumcision, small sample, only of
    crying time was measured)

57
Theoretical Mechanism
  • Endogenous Opioid release? The animals analgesia
    was reversible with the administration of opiate
    antagonist
  • Perception of sweet taste signaling pain pathways
    ?
  • How does pacifier elicit analgesia? Pacifier may
    promotes sucking and calming that increase pain
    threshold by reducing stress/anxiety

58
DAN score during venepuncture in 150 newborns
Carbajal et al, BMJ, 1999
59
Practical considerations
  • Optimal sugar solution ? Optimal dose ?
  • The suggested solution for practical purposes is
    sucrose 25 gram dissolved in 100cc of sterile
    water, or D25W
  • Technique
  • 1. Two minutes prior procedure, put the pacifier
    soaked with sugar solution in babys mouth. Coat
    the pacifier with the solution repeatedly during
    the procedure Or
  • 2. Two minutes prior procedure, Slowly (30 sec)
    administer 2cc of the solution to the tongue,
    then allow him to suck the pacifier during the
    procedure

60
Practical considerations
  • Treatment of infants older than 1 month with
    sucrose solution?
  • Insufficient data. One study showed improved pain
    response when given to children at 2-4 months
    prior immunization

61
AAP / APS policy statement September 2001
62
The assessment and management of Acute pain in
Infants, Children, and Adolescent
Policy Statement, 09/2001 American Academy of
Pediatrics American Pain Society
  • The AAP and APS jointly issued this general
    statement to emphasize the responsibility and the
    obligation of Physicians to treat acute Pain in
    children
  • Discusses myths about pain in children, the
    importance of pain assessment, procedure related
    pain and recommends using guidelines for PSA

63
The assessment and management of Acute pain in
Infants, Children, and Adolescent
Policy Statement, American Academy of
Pediatrics American Pain Society
  • Because of the diversity and complexity of the
    clinical issues present pain treatment,
    including choice of drug, dosage, and route, must
    be tailored to the individual patient, and
    analgesic given in the overall context of
    what is best
    for the patient

64
Summary
  • Pain has short and long term effects on children
  • Assessment of pain should be part of the PE
  • Pain is a subjective experience, Treat the
    individual !
  • Use PSA guidelines
  • Insufficient data to support narcotic analgesia
    in Pediatric acute abdomen
  • EMLA (60 min), Ametop (30 min), Buffered
    lidocaine
  • 2001, AAP policy statement
  • Just stick the sweetened soother in!

65
PED-EM-L_at_LISTSERV.BROWN.EDUPediatric Emergency
Medicine Discussion List
2001
  • Would you give analgesia to a child with a
    fracture, prior to obtaining parental consent?

66
PED-EM-L_at_LISTSERV.BROWN.EDUPediatric Emergency
Medicine Discussion List
2001
  • Pain is an emergency. It should be treated
    regardless of parental consent Bill Zempsky,
    Connecticut
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