Korean J Anesthesiol.  1999 Nov;37(5):831-837. 10.4097/kjae.1999.37.5.831.

Comparison of Subcutaneous Patient-Controlled Analgesia with Intravascular Patient-Controlled Analgesia Using Morphine

Affiliations
  • 1Department of Anesthesiology, College of Medicine, The Catholic University of Korea, Suwon, Korea.

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Generally, for patients with cancer, chronic disease, burn injury or pediatric patients to whom oral medication is difficult or whose vessels are fragile, it is difficult to inject analgesics parenterally. To know the effect of subcutaneous infusion which would be directly used by patients themselves or their care givers, we compared subcutaneous patient-controlled analgesia (SQ PCA) with intravenous patient-controlled analgesia (IV PCA) morphine for acute postoperative pain.
METHODS
We undertook a study to prospective, randomized, controlled patients (n = 30) undergoing elective total hysterectomy to compare SQ PCA with IV PCA morphine for postoperative pain control. We prepared a 5 mg/ml solution of morphine for the SQ PCA group (n = 15) and a 1 mg/ml solution of morphine for the IV PCA group (n = 15). The regimen of morphine was a basal rate 20 microgram/kg/h, 1 mg bolus, 10 min lockout interval, 1 hour limit of 8 mg. We evaluated the VAS score at rest and at coughing after postoperative 6, 12, 18, 24, 30, 36, 42 and 48 hours, 6 hourly doses of morphine, total requirement of infused morphine for 48 hours and delivery to demand ratio. Side effects and satisfactory score were checked too.
RESULTS
The Visual analogue scale (VAS) pain score at rest and with coughing, the 6 hourly doses of morphine, the total requirement of infused morphine for 48 hours, the delivery to demand ratio, side effects and the satisfactory score were not significantly different in the two groups (P<0.05).
CONCLUSION
Thus SQ PCA morphine represents a clinically acceptable alternative to IV PCA in the treatment of postoperative pain control.

Keyword

Analgesia, intravascular patient-controlled, subcutaneous patient-controlled; Analgesics, morphine

MeSH Terms

Analgesia, Patient-Controlled*
Analgesics
Burns
Caregivers
Chronic Disease
Cough
Humans
Hysterectomy
Infusions, Subcutaneous
Morphine*
Pain, Postoperative
Passive Cutaneous Anaphylaxis
Prospective Studies
Analgesics
Morphine
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