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Opiate-free anaesthesia may cut need for pain-killers in breast cancer patients

Opiate-free anaesthesia may cut need for pain-killers in breast cancer patients

Patients undergoing breast cancer surgery need less pain-killing medication post-surgery if they have anaesthesia that is free of opioid drugs, new research suggests.

Written by Agencies |Published : May 30, 2016 5:57 PM IST

Patients undergoing breast cancer surgery need less pain-killing medication post-surgery if they have anaesthesia that is free of opioid drugs, new research suggests. While opioid drugs provide an excellent pain-killing (analgesia) effect throughout operations, they also have side effects, the researchers said. Post-operative complications, such as respiratory depression, post-operative nausea and vomiting, itching, difficulty going to the toilet and bowel obstruction are some examples of side effects. The findings showed that patients in the non-opiate group require less pain-killers, but receive adequate pain relief. Patients require less analgesic 24 hours after a non-opiate anaesthesia than after an opiate anaesthesia. Non-opiate anaesthesia in breast cancer surgery might avoid several opiate-related side effects such as post-operative nausea and vomiting. It might also reduce cancer recurrence, said Sarah Saxena from Jules Bordet Institute in Belgium. (Read: Take up the challenge, say NO to opioids today!)

However, it is too early to recommend non-opiate anaesthesia to all breast cancer patients, Saxena added. In the study, pain-killer requirements were examined after patients received opiate anaesthesia and non-opiate anaesthesia. A randomised controlled trial was conducted, containing two groups each containing 33 breast cancer patients undergoing a mastectomy or lumpectomy. Both groups received intravenous paracetamol (1000mg/6h) and intravenous diclofenac (75 mg/12h). Patients received a PCA (patient-controlled analgesia) pump for breakthrough pain during the first 24 hours post-operatively. The results were presented at Euroanaesthesia 2016 in London recently. (Read: Pop painkillers often? It may increase your risk of a heart attack)

Source: IANS

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