Opioid Miniseries Part III: Alternative to Opioids

Opioid Miniseries Part III: Alternative to Opioids

PRACTICE RECOMMENDATIONS

1. All emergency departments should implement ALTO programs and provide opioid-free pain treatment pathways for

the following conditions:

a. Acute on chronic opioid-tolerant radicular lower back pain

b. Opioid-naive musculoskeletal pain

c. Migraine or recurrent primary headache

d. Extremity fracture or joint dislocation

e. Gastroparesis-associated or chronic functional abdominal pain

f. Renal colic

2. Emergency departments should integrate ALTO into their computerized physician order entry systems to facilitate a seamless adoption by clinicians.

3. Low-dose, subdissociative ketamine (0.1-0.3 mg/kg) is an effective analgesic that can be opioid-sparing for many acute pain syndromes. Institutional guidelines and policies should be in place to enable clinicians and nurses who administer this agent for pain.

4. For musculoskeletal pain, consider a multimodal treatment approach using acetaminophen, NSAIDs, steroids, topical medications, trigger-point injections, and (for severe pain) ketamine.

5. For headache and migraine, consider a multimodal treatment approach that includes the administration of antiemetic agents, NSAIDs, steroids, valproic acid, magnesium, and triptans. Strongly consider cervical trigger-point injection.

6. For pain with a neuropathic component, consider gabapentin.

7. For pain with a tension component, consider a muscle relaxant.

8. For pain caused by renal colic, consider an NSAID, lidocaine infusion, and desmopressin nasal spray.

9. For chronic abdominal pain, consider low doses of haloperidol, diphenhydramine, and lidocaine infusion.

10. For extremity fracture or joint dislocation, consider the immediate use of nitrous oxide and low-dose ketamine while setting up for ultrasound-guided regional anesthesia.

11. For arthritic or tendinitis pain, consider an intra-articular steroid/anesthetic injection.

POLICY RECOMMENDATIONS

1. Hospitals should update institutional guidelines and put policies in place that enable clinicians to order and nurses to administer dose-dependent ketamine and IV lidocaine in non-ICU areas.

2. Emergency departments are encouraged to assemble an interdisciplinary pain management team that includes clinicians, nurses, pharmacists, physical therapists, social workers, and case managers.

3. Reimbursement should be available for any service directly correlated to pain management, the reduction of opioid use, and treatment of drug-addicted patients.

Episoder(1144)

Episode 966: Acetaminophen Toxicity

Episode 966: Acetaminophen Toxicity

Contributor: Jorge Chalit-Hernandez, OMS4 Educational Pearls: What is the toxic dose of acetaminophen? 7.5 grams, in an adult. The safe daily limit is 4 grams in an adult with a normally functioning...

21 Jul 20253min

Episode 965: Oxygen Administration in Trauma Patients

Episode 965: Oxygen Administration in Trauma Patients

Contributor: Aaron Lessen, MD Educational Pearls: Many trauma patients are placed on oxygen via non-rebreather A large, multicenter, controlled trial evaluated the outcomes of oxygen administration i...

14 Jul 20252min

Episode 964: Ketamine & Midazolam for Prehospital Seizure Management

Episode 964: Ketamine & Midazolam for Prehospital Seizure Management

Contributor: Aaron Lessen, MD Educational Pearls: Prehospital seizures are typically managed with intramuscular midazolam (Versed) Seizures theoretically involve the NMDA pathway, and ketamine is a p...

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Episode 963: Antihypertensives and Emergency Room Considerations

Episode 963: Antihypertensives and Emergency Room Considerations

Contributor: Alec Coston, MD Educational Pearls: For patients presenting to the emergency room with hypertension, clinicians should determine if it is isolated and uncomplicated, or involves comorbidi...

30 Jun 20254min

Episode 962: HEART Score

Episode 962: HEART Score

Contributor: Taylor Lynch, MD Educational Pearls: How do we risk-stratify chest-pain patients? One option is the HEART score This score predicts a patient's 6-week risk of a major adverse cardiac ev...

23 Jun 20254min

Episode 961: Cell Phone Sign

Episode 961: Cell Phone Sign

Contributor: Aaron Lessen, MD Educational Pearls: A prospective study at the Mayo Clinic Rochester was conducted to examine whether patients actively using their phones on initial assessment in the E...

16 Jun 20251min

Episode 960: Frank's Sign - A Marker for Coronary Artery Disease

Episode 960: Frank's Sign - A Marker for Coronary Artery Disease

Contributor: Travis Barlock MD Educational Pearls Frank's sign is a curious physical exam finding first described in the literature in 1973 Bilateral earlobe creases are recognized as a marker of co...

9 Jun 20251min

Episode 959: The KLM Flight Disaster and Lessons in Healthcare Communication

Episode 959: The KLM Flight Disaster and Lessons in Healthcare Communication

Contributor: Taylor Lynch, MD Educational Pearls: The KLM Flight Disaster, also known as the Tenerife Airport Disaster, occurred on 27 March 1977. It involved the collision of two Boeing 747 passenger...

2 Jun 20256min

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