Preventive versus postoperative analgesia with paracetamol + ketorolac in laparoscopic cholecystectomy

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Abstract

Introduction: Preventive analgesia is the administration of a drug or performance of an intervention capable of inhibiting or blocking the painful response in order to prevent the pain associated with a surgical procedure. Objective: To identify whether there are differences in postoperative pain control using preventive analgesia versus postoperative analgesia, managed with paracetamol + ketorolac in patients undergoing elective laparoscopic cholecystectomy. Material and methods: Controlled clinical trial, randomized, longitudinal, unicentric, prolective, homodemic, double blind; 70 patients divided into two groups. group 1 received preventive analgesia using paracetamol + ketorolac and group 2 same scheme in an immediate postsurgical manner. Bloodpressure, heartrate, numerical verbal scale of pain and presence of side effects of drugs at different times were measured. Student’s t-test with statistical significance of p < 0.05. Results: At 60 minutes the diastolic blood pressure in group 1 had difference of means-4.20 with p = 0.027 and numerical verbal scale presented difference of means of-0.71 and p = 0.002. At four hours diastolic bloodpressure showed difference of means of-3.5 and p = 0.033. Nausea was reported in 2.9% for group 1 and 8.6% for group 2. Conclusions: There is a better response to pain in those patients who receive a preventive analgesia scheme compared to those who are administered an immediate post-surgical analgesia scheme.

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Román-Romero, J., & Córdova-González, I. (2021). Preventive versus postoperative analgesia with paracetamol + ketorolac in laparoscopic cholecystectomy. Revista Mexicana de Anestesiologia, 44(1), 8–12. https://doi.org/10.35366/97772

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