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Drug Evaluations

Pregabalin for the treatment of postsurgical pain

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Pages 2751-2758 | Published online: 27 Oct 2010
 

Abstract

Importance of the field: Multimodal postoperative pain management targeted at diminishing harmful outcomes should include pregabalin in cases that need opioid reduction and when the risk of developing chronic neuropathic postsurgical pain is present. Gabapentanoids have grown in importance due to their opioid-sparing effects. They may also contribute to the prevention of chronic postsurgical pain.

Areas covered in this review: We reviewed the literature regarding the use of gabapentanoids and their role in treatment modalities in acute postsurgical pain. Dosing, therapeutic efficacy, side effects, and their role within a multimodal regimen are discussed. Particular emphasis is placed on their ability to provide an opioid-sparing effect, as well as on their potential for inhibiting chronic neuropathic pain. A Pubmed search of pregabalin, gabapentin, acute pain, multimodal analgesia, chronic postsurgical pain, and neuropathic pain between 2000 and 2010 was done. Relevant articles – including randomized controlled trials, retrospective trials, case series, case reports, and review articles – were filtered to include those that relate to postsurgical pain.

What the reader will gain: Readers will gain an increased appreciation of the role of pregabalin in postsurgical pain in patients at risk of developing chronic pain.

Take home message: Pregabalin is a safe and effective medication that may decrease perioperative opioid use in patients with more acute neuropathic pain than acute inflammatory pain. When surgery involves more neuropathic-type acute pain there is growing evidence that pregabalin may decrease the incidence of chronic pain.

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