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Many clinicians don’t hesitate to administer analgesia in kids who present with acute pain, but nonpharmacologic therapies suffice for some patients, according to Naveen Poonai, MD, FRCPC.

“Too many times, nonpharmacologic therapies are relegated to the very last paragraph of recommendations or to the very bottom of a URL,” he said at the Pediatric Academic Societies meeting. “Nonpharmacologic therapies are things that our grandparents told us to do: common sense things that can be done at triage. They don’t require memorization of dosing, and most importantly, they don’t have side effects.”

Dr. Naveen Poonai, research director in the division of pediatric emergency medicine at Schulich School of Medicine & Dentistry at Western University, London, Ont.
Doug Brunk/MDedge News
Dr. Naveen Poonai
Dr. Poonai, research director in the division of pediatric emergency medicine at the University of Western Ontario, London, characterized pain in children as “a very personalized experience. You really cannot separate out pharmacologic from nonpharmacologic therapies when you’re dealing with pain in the ED setting – and certainly in any other acute setting. For example, immobilization, ice, child-life specialists, and distraction all have been found to benefit kids with musculoskeletal injuries.”

When analgesia is indicated, clinicians can choose from a variety of agents in the postcodeine era. Dr. Poonai said that musculoskeletal injuries constitute 10-20% of pediatric emergency department visits, yet fewer than 60% of children receive adequate analgesia. “That’s what’s really important for patient and caregiver satisfaction,” he said.

Mounting evidence supports the use of ibuprofen as a go-to agent for mild to moderate pain in patients with musculoskeletal injuries, including results from a randomized, controlled multicenter trial of 500 youth (Canadian J Emerg Med. 2016:18:S29). “We know that ibuprofen is superior to acetaminophen or codeine and that it’s as good or better than oral opioids and with fewer side effects,” Dr. Poonai said, adding that it provides a 25 mm visual analog score (VAS) reduction in pain at 60 minutes. Another study that compared ibuprofen with codeine for acute pediatric arm fracture pain found that ibuprofen was associated with improved functioning and was at least as effective as acetaminophen plus codeine (Ann Emerg Med. 2009 Oct;54[4]:553-60).

A number of oral opioids have gained favor for use in children who present with acute pain. However, in a randomized trial, Dr. Poonai and his associates found no significant difference in analgesic efficacy between orally administered morphine and ibuprofen for the management of postfracture pain in 134 children (CMAJ. 2014 Dec 9;186[18]:1358-63). Oral morphine was also associated with more side effects. At the same time, tramadol and hydromorphone have not been well studied in children with musculoskeletal pain. “Currently, the use of hydromorphone is limited to children with sickle cell disease, but the use is branching out,” he said. “Oxycodone and oral morphine pose the greatest risk of side effects. The bottom line here is that opioids should be added to ibuprofen and acetaminophen rather than replacing them for mild to moderate pain.”

 

 

In 2014, a study from the Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews concluded that intranasal fentanyl can be effective for the management of moderate to severe pain in children. A dose of 1.0-1.5 mcg/kg is associated with a 40-mm pain reduction in VAS at 10 minutes. “The benefits are that it is not an invasive approach, it’s been rigorously studied, and it is equivalent to IV morphine for moderate to severe pain,” said Dr. Poonai, who was not part of the Cochrane review. “It lasts about 60 minutes, with minimal side effects.”

A separate analysis found that intranasal fentanyl and ketamine were associated with similar pain reduction in children with moderate to severe pain from limb injury (Ann Emerg Med. 2015 Mar;65[3]:248-54.e1). Ketamine was associated with more minor adverse events. An intranasal dose of 1 mg/kg can cause a 40- to 45-mm reduction in VAS at 30 minutes.

Dr. Poonai went on to discuss treatment options for abdominal pain, noting that fewer than two-thirds of children with suspected appendicitis receive analgesia. “If they are receiving it, it’s often not until after the ultrasound is performed,” he said. “There is a still a reluctance toward providing opioid analgesia for a child with suspected appendicitis for fear of masking a diagnosis or leading to complications.” A systematic review led by Dr. Poonai found that the use of opioids in undifferentiated acute abdominal pain in children is associated with no difference in pain scores and an increased risk of mild side effects (Acad Emerg Med. 2014 21[11]:1183-92). However, there was no increased risk of perforation or abscess. “We found that single-dose IV opioids were actually beneficial,” he said.

Dr. Poonai characterized most of the current evidence on IV morphine for suspected appendicitis as being of low to moderate quality, “but they are generally favorable for the indication,” he said. “It is titratable to effect, and triage-initiated protocols improve timing and consistency of analgesia.” He reported having no financial disclosures.
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Many clinicians don’t hesitate to administer analgesia in kids who present with acute pain, but nonpharmacologic therapies suffice for some patients, according to Naveen Poonai, MD, FRCPC.

“Too many times, nonpharmacologic therapies are relegated to the very last paragraph of recommendations or to the very bottom of a URL,” he said at the Pediatric Academic Societies meeting. “Nonpharmacologic therapies are things that our grandparents told us to do: common sense things that can be done at triage. They don’t require memorization of dosing, and most importantly, they don’t have side effects.”

Dr. Naveen Poonai, research director in the division of pediatric emergency medicine at Schulich School of Medicine & Dentistry at Western University, London, Ont.
Doug Brunk/MDedge News
Dr. Naveen Poonai
Dr. Poonai, research director in the division of pediatric emergency medicine at the University of Western Ontario, London, characterized pain in children as “a very personalized experience. You really cannot separate out pharmacologic from nonpharmacologic therapies when you’re dealing with pain in the ED setting – and certainly in any other acute setting. For example, immobilization, ice, child-life specialists, and distraction all have been found to benefit kids with musculoskeletal injuries.”

When analgesia is indicated, clinicians can choose from a variety of agents in the postcodeine era. Dr. Poonai said that musculoskeletal injuries constitute 10-20% of pediatric emergency department visits, yet fewer than 60% of children receive adequate analgesia. “That’s what’s really important for patient and caregiver satisfaction,” he said.

Mounting evidence supports the use of ibuprofen as a go-to agent for mild to moderate pain in patients with musculoskeletal injuries, including results from a randomized, controlled multicenter trial of 500 youth (Canadian J Emerg Med. 2016:18:S29). “We know that ibuprofen is superior to acetaminophen or codeine and that it’s as good or better than oral opioids and with fewer side effects,” Dr. Poonai said, adding that it provides a 25 mm visual analog score (VAS) reduction in pain at 60 minutes. Another study that compared ibuprofen with codeine for acute pediatric arm fracture pain found that ibuprofen was associated with improved functioning and was at least as effective as acetaminophen plus codeine (Ann Emerg Med. 2009 Oct;54[4]:553-60).

A number of oral opioids have gained favor for use in children who present with acute pain. However, in a randomized trial, Dr. Poonai and his associates found no significant difference in analgesic efficacy between orally administered morphine and ibuprofen for the management of postfracture pain in 134 children (CMAJ. 2014 Dec 9;186[18]:1358-63). Oral morphine was also associated with more side effects. At the same time, tramadol and hydromorphone have not been well studied in children with musculoskeletal pain. “Currently, the use of hydromorphone is limited to children with sickle cell disease, but the use is branching out,” he said. “Oxycodone and oral morphine pose the greatest risk of side effects. The bottom line here is that opioids should be added to ibuprofen and acetaminophen rather than replacing them for mild to moderate pain.”

 

 

In 2014, a study from the Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews concluded that intranasal fentanyl can be effective for the management of moderate to severe pain in children. A dose of 1.0-1.5 mcg/kg is associated with a 40-mm pain reduction in VAS at 10 minutes. “The benefits are that it is not an invasive approach, it’s been rigorously studied, and it is equivalent to IV morphine for moderate to severe pain,” said Dr. Poonai, who was not part of the Cochrane review. “It lasts about 60 minutes, with minimal side effects.”

A separate analysis found that intranasal fentanyl and ketamine were associated with similar pain reduction in children with moderate to severe pain from limb injury (Ann Emerg Med. 2015 Mar;65[3]:248-54.e1). Ketamine was associated with more minor adverse events. An intranasal dose of 1 mg/kg can cause a 40- to 45-mm reduction in VAS at 30 minutes.

Dr. Poonai went on to discuss treatment options for abdominal pain, noting that fewer than two-thirds of children with suspected appendicitis receive analgesia. “If they are receiving it, it’s often not until after the ultrasound is performed,” he said. “There is a still a reluctance toward providing opioid analgesia for a child with suspected appendicitis for fear of masking a diagnosis or leading to complications.” A systematic review led by Dr. Poonai found that the use of opioids in undifferentiated acute abdominal pain in children is associated with no difference in pain scores and an increased risk of mild side effects (Acad Emerg Med. 2014 21[11]:1183-92). However, there was no increased risk of perforation or abscess. “We found that single-dose IV opioids were actually beneficial,” he said.

Dr. Poonai characterized most of the current evidence on IV morphine for suspected appendicitis as being of low to moderate quality, “but they are generally favorable for the indication,” he said. “It is titratable to effect, and triage-initiated protocols improve timing and consistency of analgesia.” He reported having no financial disclosures.

Many clinicians don’t hesitate to administer analgesia in kids who present with acute pain, but nonpharmacologic therapies suffice for some patients, according to Naveen Poonai, MD, FRCPC.

“Too many times, nonpharmacologic therapies are relegated to the very last paragraph of recommendations or to the very bottom of a URL,” he said at the Pediatric Academic Societies meeting. “Nonpharmacologic therapies are things that our grandparents told us to do: common sense things that can be done at triage. They don’t require memorization of dosing, and most importantly, they don’t have side effects.”

Dr. Naveen Poonai, research director in the division of pediatric emergency medicine at Schulich School of Medicine & Dentistry at Western University, London, Ont.
Doug Brunk/MDedge News
Dr. Naveen Poonai
Dr. Poonai, research director in the division of pediatric emergency medicine at the University of Western Ontario, London, characterized pain in children as “a very personalized experience. You really cannot separate out pharmacologic from nonpharmacologic therapies when you’re dealing with pain in the ED setting – and certainly in any other acute setting. For example, immobilization, ice, child-life specialists, and distraction all have been found to benefit kids with musculoskeletal injuries.”

When analgesia is indicated, clinicians can choose from a variety of agents in the postcodeine era. Dr. Poonai said that musculoskeletal injuries constitute 10-20% of pediatric emergency department visits, yet fewer than 60% of children receive adequate analgesia. “That’s what’s really important for patient and caregiver satisfaction,” he said.

Mounting evidence supports the use of ibuprofen as a go-to agent for mild to moderate pain in patients with musculoskeletal injuries, including results from a randomized, controlled multicenter trial of 500 youth (Canadian J Emerg Med. 2016:18:S29). “We know that ibuprofen is superior to acetaminophen or codeine and that it’s as good or better than oral opioids and with fewer side effects,” Dr. Poonai said, adding that it provides a 25 mm visual analog score (VAS) reduction in pain at 60 minutes. Another study that compared ibuprofen with codeine for acute pediatric arm fracture pain found that ibuprofen was associated with improved functioning and was at least as effective as acetaminophen plus codeine (Ann Emerg Med. 2009 Oct;54[4]:553-60).

A number of oral opioids have gained favor for use in children who present with acute pain. However, in a randomized trial, Dr. Poonai and his associates found no significant difference in analgesic efficacy between orally administered morphine and ibuprofen for the management of postfracture pain in 134 children (CMAJ. 2014 Dec 9;186[18]:1358-63). Oral morphine was also associated with more side effects. At the same time, tramadol and hydromorphone have not been well studied in children with musculoskeletal pain. “Currently, the use of hydromorphone is limited to children with sickle cell disease, but the use is branching out,” he said. “Oxycodone and oral morphine pose the greatest risk of side effects. The bottom line here is that opioids should be added to ibuprofen and acetaminophen rather than replacing them for mild to moderate pain.”

 

 

In 2014, a study from the Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews concluded that intranasal fentanyl can be effective for the management of moderate to severe pain in children. A dose of 1.0-1.5 mcg/kg is associated with a 40-mm pain reduction in VAS at 10 minutes. “The benefits are that it is not an invasive approach, it’s been rigorously studied, and it is equivalent to IV morphine for moderate to severe pain,” said Dr. Poonai, who was not part of the Cochrane review. “It lasts about 60 minutes, with minimal side effects.”

A separate analysis found that intranasal fentanyl and ketamine were associated with similar pain reduction in children with moderate to severe pain from limb injury (Ann Emerg Med. 2015 Mar;65[3]:248-54.e1). Ketamine was associated with more minor adverse events. An intranasal dose of 1 mg/kg can cause a 40- to 45-mm reduction in VAS at 30 minutes.

Dr. Poonai went on to discuss treatment options for abdominal pain, noting that fewer than two-thirds of children with suspected appendicitis receive analgesia. “If they are receiving it, it’s often not until after the ultrasound is performed,” he said. “There is a still a reluctance toward providing opioid analgesia for a child with suspected appendicitis for fear of masking a diagnosis or leading to complications.” A systematic review led by Dr. Poonai found that the use of opioids in undifferentiated acute abdominal pain in children is associated with no difference in pain scores and an increased risk of mild side effects (Acad Emerg Med. 2014 21[11]:1183-92). However, there was no increased risk of perforation or abscess. “We found that single-dose IV opioids were actually beneficial,” he said.

Dr. Poonai characterized most of the current evidence on IV morphine for suspected appendicitis as being of low to moderate quality, “but they are generally favorable for the indication,” he said. “It is titratable to effect, and triage-initiated protocols improve timing and consistency of analgesia.” He reported having no financial disclosures.
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