From the Journals

Patients with severe obesity may have difficulty grading pain


 

FROM SURGERY FOR OBESITY AND RELATED DISEASES

Patients with severe obesity may have greater difficulty perceiving and grading pain than do average-weight patients. Those with severe obesity display hypoalgesia when exposed to random noxious stimuli, according to Bart Torensma and his associates.

In the study, 43 patients with severe obesity and 38 controls were enrolled, of whom 41 and 35 participated. Results found the penalty scores, a tool developed to assess perception and grading of pain, differed significantly with higher penalty scores in patients with obesity for both nociceptive assays (heat pain; P = .01, electrical pain; P = .03). “We observed that participants with severe obesity had higher electrical pain threshold and tolerance values, compared with control patients, an indication of lower sensitivity to electrical pain,” the investigators wrote.

In patients with obesity the penalty scores ranged from 1.5 to 13.5 (heat pain) and from 1.0 to 12.5 (electrical pain). But penalty score distribution differed significantly between study groups for electrical pain, with penalty scores greater than 3.5 in 47.3% in patients with obesity versus 22.9% of controls (P = .049). For heat pain, 46.2% of patients with obesity versus 28.6% of control participants had penalty scores greater than 3.5 (P = .15).

“Compared with patients without obesity, patients with obesity displayed hypoalgesia to noxious electrical stimuli together with difficulty in grading experimental noxious thermal and electrical stimuli in between pain threshold and tolerance,” researchers concluded. “We argue that the latter may have a significant effect on pain treatment and consequently needs to be taken into account when treating patients with obesity for acute or chronic pain.”

Read the full study in Surgery for Obesity and Related Diseases (doi: 10.1016/j.soard.2017.01.015).

Recommended Reading

For opioid-related hospitalizations, men and women are equal
MDedge Surgery
Follow five tips to mitigate opioid prescribing risks
MDedge Surgery
New on the streets: Drug for nerve pain boosts high for opioid abusers
MDedge Surgery
Opioid prescribing drops nationally, remains high in some counties
MDedge Surgery
Nearly half of patients who stop taking opioids for 6 months resume use later
MDedge Surgery
Physician liability in opioid deaths
MDedge Surgery
Surgeons can take steps to reduce excess opioids
MDedge Surgery
Opioids overprescribed in elective hernia repair patients
MDedge Surgery
Intraoperative ketamine makes no dent in postop delirium or pain
MDedge Surgery
Is pain or dependency driving elevated opioid use among long-term cancer survivors?
MDedge Surgery