SIMPAR 2013
Transcription
SIMPAR 2013
SIMPAR 2013 STUDY IN MULTIDISCIPLINARY PAIN RESEARCH 5th MEETING Pavia, March 22-23, 2013 ACUTE AND CHRONIC PAIN Where we are and where we have to go. From bench to bedside Presidents A. Braschi, G. Fanelli Scientific Committee M. R. Clark, J. De Andrés, P. Ingelmo, M. Allegri Scientific Organization D. Bugada, M. De Gregori, C. E. Minella Supported by an educational grant of Fondazione IRCCS Policlinico San Matteo, Pavia, Italy MINERVA ANESTESIOLOGICA Vol. 79 March 2013 Suppl. 1 to No. 3 CONTENTS ABSTRACTS 6 How animal model could teach us opioid activity and its genetic variability response Baron R. 1 Tapentadol: two mechanisms of action. A new pharmacologic class on the horizon? Mogil J. 8 1 Endogenous opioid system driven placebo Oxycodone and naloxone: a new combination for a better chronic pain control in elderly people Gracely R. H. Minella C. E., Di Matteo M., Allegri M. 2 10 Livigni S. Maixner W. 4 10 Stein C. Rollason V., Roulet L., Samer C., Daali Y., Besson M., Piguet V., Escher M., Dayer P., Desmeules J. A. 4 12 Klepstad P. Cruccu G., Truini A. Genetic architecture of mu-opioid gene locus and responses to opioids Peripherally acting opioids and clinical implications for pain control Pharmacokinetics of opioids. Influenced by genetic variability? Mechanisms of post-opioid exposure hyperalgesia and tolerance Rotation of opioids: from theory to practice Neuropathic pain: a challenging entity with complex mechanisms 6 13 Fillingim R. B. Pergolizzi J. Male and female: differences in opioid response and pain perception Vol. 79 - Suppl. 1 to No. 3 Chronic pain: identifying underlying mechanisms that benefit from multimodal approaches MINERVA ANESTESIOLOGICA VII CONTENTS 14 26 Clark M. R. Ramirez M. F., Cata J. P. Centrally acting drugs and dependence circuits: a clinical point of view 15 NSAIDs and acetaminophen: which role in chronic pain management? Schmidt W. K. The effects of regional anesthesia-analgesia on the immune system 28 Regional anesthesia and analgesia and mortality. Is this the real important outcome? De Andrés J., Reinac M. A. 17 Best practices in safe NSAID use in the elderly: a preview to the FDA safe use initiative – ACPP project Taylor R. 30 Role of regional anesthesia in fast-track surgery. Beyond analgesia? Carli F. 18 Breakthrough pain: how to effectively treat. New old drugs with different pharmacokinetic approaches Gharibo C. 32 Ultrasound guidance in regional anesthesia: what is the evidence? Mariano E. R. 19 Localized neuropathic pain and transdermal therapeutical approach Baron R. 35 Role of multimodal anesthetic and analgesic regimens in cancer surgery Gottumukkala V. 20 Practical overview of interventional pain management techniques: “What the everyday interventionist needs to know” 36 Hurschman A. B. Asenjo J. F. 20 38 Benzon H. T. Cata J. P., Gebhardt R. 23 40 Linderoth B. Lavand’homme P. Radiofrequency in interventional pain management: what is the evidence? Pharmacological enhancement of spinal stimulation for pain. A new strategy Paravertebral blocks The tranverse abdominis plabe block. Beyond pain outcomes Is there an alternative to epidural blocks? Intra wound infusion 24 41 Huntoon M. A. Cervero F. Regional anesthesia: why must I choose it? VIII Pain: friend or foe? A neurobiological perspective MINERVA ANESTESIOLOGICA March 2013 CONTENTS 42 Medical publishing in pain: future directions Huntoon M. A. 57 Possibility of particulated steroids injection for selective root blocks in the cervical and lumbar regions: anatomical study Reina M. A., De Andrés J. A., Hernández J. M., López A., Fernández Domínguez M., Prats-Galino A. 44 Ultrasound for chronic pain intervention: a new era? Peng P. POSTERS 63 45 Altered central pain processing: current status of translational research Curatolo M. Survival on controlled-release (CR) morphine versus cr oxycodone in opioid-naïve patients with nonmalignant pain: data from Danish national health registers Christensen R., Bliddal H., Tarp S., Vestergaard P. 47 An injectable nano-delivery platform for the sustained release of lidocaine Khaled S. M., Yazdi I. K., Van Eps J., Taghipour N., Martinez J., Fernandez-Moure J., Haddix S., Weiner B., Tasciotti E. 63 The role of tramadol in labor analgesia Di Gennaro T. L., Passavanti M. B., Pace M. C., Coletta F., D’arienzo S., Stumbo R., Pota V., Sansone P., Aurilio C. 64 49 Postoperative latent pain sensitisation: can we prevent acute pain to become chronic? Puig M. M. Efficacy of pain therapy and quality of life in opioidnaïve patients treated with oxycodone/naloxone or other strong opioids Hesselbarth S. 65 50 How can we prolong at-home postoperative regional analgesia? Mariano E. R. Low dose of lidocaine (ld) enhances in vitro natural killer (nk) cell function Ramirez M. F., Bergesio L., Truty M. J., Cata J. P. 67 53 Mechanisms of chronification of acute into chronic pain Neuropsychological effects of opioid drugs in chronic pain patients: state of art Schumacher M. A. Caserio V., Rossi F., Allegri N., Minella C. E., Govoni S., Liccione D. 54 68 RaffaR. B. Schiappa E., Compagnone C., Tagliaferri F., Berti M., Fanelli G. 54 69 Benzon H. T. Sacco M., Fanelli G., Micheli F. Drug-drug combinations in the management of chronic pain Steroid injections in chronic spinal pain: indications, effectiveness, and safety Vol. 79 - Suppl. 1 to No. 3 Analgesia nociception index: a new system of monitoring of pain of patient under general anesthesia Treatment of disk herniation by intradiscal oxygenozone (O2-O3) injection technique MINERVA ANESTESIOLOGICA IX CONTENTS 70 75 De Carolis G., Tollapi L., Bondi F., Paroli M., Ciaramella A., Poli P. Golubovska I., Miscuks A., Arons M., Rubins U. Intra-articular pulsed radiofrequency treatment in chronic knee osteoarthritis pain with ultrasoundguided tecnique 70 Pain relief and quality of life after spinal cord stimulation for fbss: a comparison between paddle and cylindrical lead De Carolis G., Paroli M., Tollapi L., Bondi F., Ciaramella A., Poli P. 71 Ultrasound guided tap block as part of fast-track multimodal rehabilitation after cesarean section Torrano V., Bolis C., Santangelo E., Russo G. Non-contact optical photoplethysmography imaging technique make safe decisions before neurotomy or neurolysis 75 Ultrasound guided costovertebral canal block: a novel approach for ipsilateral analgesia of the trunk Yutaka S. 76 Relevance of Cytochrome p450 determination (genotype and phenotype) for analgesic efficacy or resistance in a multidisciplinary pain center Rollason V., Lorenzini K. I., Samer C., Daali Y., Besson M., Piguet V., Escher M., Dayer P., Desmeules J. A. 71 Lumbar intra-articular facet joint injections in the treatment of facet mediated low back pain Badran S., Madkor M., Alkader A. A., Khatab A., Mewida T. 72 Ultrasound-guided alcohol injection in the treatment of Morton’s neuroma Russo G., Bolis C., Santangelo E., Torrano V. 72 Comparison of analgesic effect of paracetamol and morphine infusion after elective laparotomy surgeries Yazdkhasti P., Safari S., Motavaf M. 77 Impacts of high concentration of ropivacaine in second stage of labour during epidural analgesia Poma S., Broglia F., Ciceri M., Domenegati E., Fuardo M., Noli S., Pellicori S., Repossi F., Sportiello D., Zizzi S., lardi M., Bugada D., Pistone B., Delmonte M. P., Iotti G. 77 Ayx1: a single-dose intrathecal dna-decoy for the prevention of acute and chronic postsurgical pain Mamet J. M., Manning D., Scott H., Schmidt W., Klukinov M., Yeomans D. 73 Percutaneous disc decompression for lumbar pain, what is new? Salah Al-Ali 78 Magnesium sulphate as a novel treatment in resistant tic douloureux 74 Epidural steroid use in Northern Ireland. Are we missing the point? Soleimanpour H., Ghafouri R. R., Aghamohammadi D., Safari S., Marjani K., Soleimanpour M. , Motavaf M. Maguire R. 74 78 Radiofrequency pain treatment in hip and knee osteoarthritis patients unsuitable for surgery Baldi C., Tagariello V. X The effect of low level laser therapy on knee osteoarthritis: prospective, descriptive study Soleimanpour H., Gahramani K., Taheri R., Safari S., Ej Golzari S., Esfanjani R. M., Motavaf M. MINERVA ANESTESIOLOGICA March 2013 ABSTRACTS How animal model could teach us opioid activity and its genetic variability response Jeffrey Mogil Department of Psychology and Alan Edwards Centre for Research on Pain, McGill University, Montreal, Canada Genetic approaches to pain have two major aims: 1) to attempt to explain inherited variability in biological systems, and 2) to aid in drug development using an unbiased and systematic approach. Pain is associated with much variability, including in the propensity to develop painful pathologies and in the response to analgesic manipulations. We have performed extensive studies of the sensitivity of inbred mice to basal nociception, hypersensitivity after injury, and to multiple analgesic classes, including opioid, non‑opioid, and non‑steroidal anti‑inflammatory drugs. Recent and ongoing gene mapping efforts are identifying the chromosomal locations of genes underlying the variability in these traits. These efforts may lead to novel clinical treatments for pain and/or facilitate the patient-centered, individualized treatment of pain using current pharmaceuticals. However, the large number of genes likely playing similar roles suggests that this day is not near. Endogenous opioid system driven placebo Richard H Gracely Center for Neurosensory Disorders, School of Dentistry, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, NC 27599, USA An inert substance, a placebo, may mimic the effects of an active substance. This placebo effect has been known for centuries and has been demonstrated in many branches of medicine. Placebo effects are particularly potent in studies of agents that attenuate pain. Double-blind placebo-controlled trials are required for the demonstrations of analgesic efficacy and these trials usually reveal a substantial proportion of subjects who achieve the analgesic effects of the active drug after receiving Vol. 79 - Suppl. 1 to No. 3 only placebo. These subjects have been regarded in a negative light as unreliable or overly suggestible, while a more positive view posits the presence of an innate capability to activate endogenous analgesic systems. The understanding of such systems was advanced considerably by the exciting discovery of endogenous opioid systems that produce analgesic and other effects similar to those produced by exogenous opioids such as morphine. In a landmark study in 1978, Levine and Fields administered a placebo analgesic to patients in the post-operative period after oral surgical extraction of third molar teeth. Ratings of postsurgical pain were reduced after placebo, demonstrating a placebo effect. These investigators then delivered an infusion of 10 mg naloxone, a narcotic antagonist used in smaller (0.4 mg) doses to reverse exogenous opioid analgesia. The postoperative pain increased, apparently reversing the placebo effect. These investigators conservatively concluded that these results were consistent with an endogenous opioid placebo effect that was reversed by the narcotic antagonist. In a following study, our own laboratory expanded on the original design to demonstrate the role of endogenous opioids in placebo postoperative dental analgesia. In addition to the original three groups of no treatment and the open administration of naloxone or placebo, we found it necessary to include a fourth group since the open administration of naloxone could serve as both an antagonist and a placebo. This fourth group received naloxone without placebo. This was accomplished by administering the naloxone in a hidden infusion without the subjects’ knowledge that a substance had been infused. All four groups received a double blind hidden infusion followed by no further treatment or an open infusion of placebo that was observed by the subjects. Of these four groups, two did not receive naloxone in the hidden infusion, followed by either placebo or no treatment. The results comparing these two groups showed a placebo effect, in this case with a functioning endogenous opioid system. The other two groups first received naloxone by the hidden infusion and then placebo or no treatment. The results also showed a placebo effect, MINERVA ANESTESIOLOGICA 1 ABSTRACT in this case with the endogenous opioid system blocked. Thus the placebo effect occurred whether the opioid system was blocked or not, indicating that the placebo analgesia was not mediated by release of endogenous opioids. Interestingly, naloxone had an effect. It increased pain in the placebo group, and also increased pain in the no treatment group. This result is consistent with reversal of endogenous analgesia in all subjects receiving naloxone, including those in the no treatment group. The endogenous opioids mediating this analgesia were likely released during surgery and in the postoperative period due to the stress, pain and tissue damage associated with surgery. These effects were independent of a placebo effect that occurred with either a functioning or blocked endogenous opioid system. We concluded that opioid placebo analgesia is possible but was not demonstrated in this experiment. Since these preliminary experiments, studies of placebo analgesia have blossomed with a consistent set of findings. These studies have both identified factors that increase the probability of a placebo response and identified mechanisms that mediate this response. Accumulating evidence indicates that situations that create expectancies of analgesia and situations that provide a learned, conditioned effect of analgesia both promote placebo analgesia. The effects of conditioning are increased by increasing the number of conditioning trials. The resultant placebo effect may be mediated by activation of either endogenous opioid systems or non-opioid systems. Opioid systems are implicated if placebo analgesia is attenuated by administration of an opioid antagonist or of a cholecystokinin-2 receptor agonist such as pentagastrin, while non-opioid effects are implicated if analgesia is unaffected by these manipulations. Such studies have shown that conditions of strong expectation activate opioid systems while weak expectations activate non-opioid systems. Conditioning to an opioid results in opioid analgesia while conditioning to a non-opioid drug results in a placebo effect that is not mediated by endogenous opioids. Opioid placebo analgesia can be spatially specific, affecting only a restricted region such as a single extremity. Recent evidence suggests that nonopioid analgesia may be mediated by activation of cannabinoid receptors. Methods that use hidden infusions administer antagonists independent of a placebo response and, in addition, demonstrate the placebo component to active treatments by comparing the effects observed after hidden or open administration. 2 These effects continue to be evaluated by verbal report and by physiological measures, including the use of modern neuroimaging methods, that have further refined the understanding of the mechanisms that mediate placebo analgesia and the conditions that activate these mechanisms. Genetic architecture of mu-opioid gene locus and responses to opioids Luda Diatchenko Centre for Neurosensory Disorders, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Chapel Hill, USA. Opioid analgesics are the most widely used drugs to treat moderate to severe pain. Unfortunately, these agents produce significant individual side effects consisting of miosis, pruritus, sedation, nausea and vomiting, cognitive impairment, constipation, hypotension and life-threatening respiratory depression.1-4 Furthermore, there is considerable inter-individual variability in the clinical response to opioid analgesics. For example, the minimal effective analgesic concentration (MEAC) for opioids, such as morphine, pethidine, alfentanil and sufentanil, vary among patients by factors of 5 to 10.5, 6 As such, there is a substantial need to develop new biological markers that will provide valid and reliable predictions of individual responses to opioid therapy. OPRM1 is the primary target of both endogenous and exogenous opioid analgesics, which mediates basal nociception as well as μ-opioid receptor agonists responses.7-10 The suggested genetic polymorphisms in the human OPRM1 gene, which codes for OPRM1, is the primary candidate for sources of clinically relevant variability in opiate sensitivity and baseline nociception.11-13 The OPRM1 receptor is a member of G-protein-coupled receptors (GPCRs) family. It has an extracellular N-terminus and intracellular C-terminus, with seven membrane-spanning domains that comprise the binding pocket for exogenous drugs. OPRM1 induces analgesia via pertussis toxin (PTX)-sensitive inhibitory G protein (G i/o), which inhibits cAMP formation and Ca2+ conductance and activates K+ conductance, leading to hyper-polarization of cells thereby, exerting an inhibitory effect.14, 15 Nevertheless, opposite, cellular stimulatory effects of opiates have also been demonstrated in a manner that depends on the concentration of the drug and the duration of incubation.16, 17 Both ex- MINERVA ANESTESIOLOGICA March 2013 ABSTRACT tremely low and extremely high doses of morphine, as well as chronic administration of opioids can elicit a hyperalgesia in animal models of pain.18, 19 Furthermore, a dual effect of opioids on cAMP formation has been reported in cell culture.20-23 While the molecular mechanism mediating the excitatory effects of opiates is unclear, a switch in the G protein coupling profile of the OPRM1 from Gi to both Gs 24-26 and Gq,27 as well as adenylyl cyclase (AC) activation by Gβγ21,28 has been suggested. The stimulatory effects of opiates is believed to provide a cellular mechanism underling opioid receptor-mediated hyperanalgesia, tolerance and dependence.29 The major form of OPRM1, also called MOR1, is coded by exons 1, 2, 3 and 4, whereas exon 1 codes for first transmembrane domain and exon 2 and 3 code for the second through seven transmembrane domains.30 There is growing evidence from rodent studies that demonstrate an important role of alternatively-spliced forms of OPRM1 in mediating opiate analgesia.30 The synergistic activities of these splice variants has been proposed to explain the complex pharmacology of μ-opioids.30 Yet, it is unclear whether the findings from rodent studies are applicable to human opioid responses because there is a striking discrepancy between the genomic organization of mouse OPRM1 and the genomic organization of human OPRM1. In accordance with the NCBI database, the mouse OPRM1 gene consists of 20 exons and codes for 41 alternative-spliced forms, while the human OPRM1 gene consists of only 9 exons and codes for only 19 alternative-spliced forms (see Unigene databases).30-33 For the majority of exons of the mouse OPRM1 gene there are no human homologues. There are two common splicing patterns of OPRM1 that involve the C-terminus and Nterminus. C-terminus variants contain exons 1, 2 and 3 and code for all seven transmembrane domains, but differ structurally and functionally at the intracellular domain, a region important in transduction of the signal following receptor activation. The mouse also has a number of variants that differ in their N-terminus, some of which encode for truncated receptors. Reported mouse N-terminus variants are initiated from exon 11. Exon 11 is located approximately 30 kb upstream of exon 1 and is under the control of a different upstream promoter, suggesting alternative regulation of transcription. Three of these variants are predicted to code for truncated receptors with only six transmembrane domains (6TM). The functional Vol. 79 - Suppl. 1 to No. 3 significance of truncated receptors is not clear, but in other receptor systems, they have been reported to modulate the activity of the full version of receptor 34-36 or to change the biological activity of the protein, sometimes in the opposite direction.37 Several polymorphisms within OPRM1 gene locus have been found in the promoter, coding and intron regions of the gene that are associated with several pharmacological and physiological effects mediated by OPRM1 stimulation.38 However, among SNPs with relatively high reported allelic frequency, which can mediate a significant degree of the variable clinical effects observed in a population, only the A118G OPRM1 SNP (Asp40Asn) has been repeatedly shown to have functional consequences. This missense SNP changes the Nterminal region amino acid Asn to Asp, which decreases the number of sites for N-linked glycosylation of the OPRM1 receptor from five to four, and thus, the G allele is reported to increase the affinity of OPRM1 receptor for β-endorphin by threefold.39 On the other hand, it has been shown that the transfection of an allelic variants of OPRM1 cDNA constructs into Chinese hamster ovary cells expresses more than a 10-fold lower OPRM1 protein levels for OPRM1-G118.40 Several studies have demonstrated associations between the A118G polymorphisms and various OPRM1-dependent phenotypes, including responses to opiates. However, only a small percentage of the variability of related phenotypes has been explained and conflicting and/or inconsistent results have been reported.41-44 Collectively, these findings suggest the existence of the other functional SNPs within OPRM1 gene locus and possibly within other yet undiscovered functional elements of the gene. In addition to the A118G polymorphism, another functional SNP (rs563649), which is located within an alternatively-spliced OPRM1 isoform (MOR-1K), has been identified. The MOR-1K alternatively-spliced variant codes for 6TM OPRM1 isoforms that display excitatory rather than the inhibitory cellular effects, which are characteristic of the canonical 7TM isoforms. Thus, stimulation of the 6TM isoforms may underlie the molecular mechanisms mediating opioid-dependent hyperalgesia, tolerance and dependence. However, the functional contribution of 6TM MOR into clinical responses to opioids is still emerging. In summary, elucidation of genetic architecture of human OPRM1 gene locus will significantly contribute to our understanding of the genetics of opioid responses and human pain perception. It MINERVA ANESTESIOLOGICA 3 ABSTRACT will facilitate the future development of valid and reliable genetic tests that can be used to predict the safety and efficacy of opioids on an individual basis and will open the door to novel strategies for opioid drug development. lation of tight junction proteins in the perineurium to facilitate peripheral opioid analgesia. Anesthesiology 2012; 116(6):1323-34. Pharmacokinetics of opioids. Influenced by genetic variability? Peripherally acting opioids and clinical implications for pain control Christoph Stein Klinik für Anaesthesiologie und operative Intensivmedizin, Freie Universität Berlin, Charité Campus Benjamin Franklin, Hindenburgdamm 30, D-12200 Berlin, Germany This presentation will discuss novel approaches and molecules for the treatment of pain without central side effects such as addiction, tolerance, respiratory depression or sedation. Opioid receptors are present and upregulated on peripheral sensory neurons, and opioid peptides are expressed in immune cells within injured tissue. Environmental stress and releasing agents can lead to secretion of these peptides and to local analgesia by inhibiting the excitability of peripheral sensory neurons. We have examined perineurial permeability, G-protein coupling and signaling of opioid receptors in sensory neurons, opioid peptide processing, release and extracellular degradation by immune cells, and adhesion molecules, chemokines and growth factors governing the migration of opioid containing cells to inflamed tissue. As a result of the interaction between immune cell-derived opioid peptides and opioid receptors on peripheral sensory neurons, tolerance does not develop to the analgesic effects of locally applied exogenous opioids in inflammatory pain. Clinical data will be discussed demonstrating that peripherally active or locally administered opioids can potently inhibit acute and chronic inflammatory pain associated with surgery or arthritis. References 1. Stein C, Schäfer M, Machelska H: Attacking pain at its source: new perspectives on opioids. Nature Med 2003; 9(8):1003-8. 2. Zöllner C, Mousa SA, Fischer O, Rittner HL, Shaqura M, Brack A, Shakibaei M, Binder W, Urban F, Stein C, Schäfer M: Chronic morphine use does not induce peripheral tolerance in a rat model of inflammatory pain. J Clin Invest 2008;118(3):1065-73. 3. Stein C, Machelska H: Modulation of peripheral sensory neurons by the immune system: implications for pain therapy. Pharmacol Rev 2011;63:860-81. 4. Rittner HL, Amasheh S, Moshourab R, Hackel D, Yamdeu RS, Mousa SA, Fromm M, Stein C, Brack A. Modu- 4 Pål Klepstad Department of Anesthesiology and Acute Medicine, St. Olavs University Hospital, Trondheim, Norway. Opioids are metabolized primarily in the liver to either inactive or active substances. Therefore, reductions in metabolism may both give enhanced efficacy in the case of inactive metabolites or increased efficacy in the case of active metabolites. CYP enzymes metabolize most opioids, with the most notable exceptions being morphine and hydromorphone, which are glucuronidated. For some opioids it is discussed whether metabolism is influenced by genetic variability in genes coding enzymes. In this review the influence of genetic variability will be briefly described for some selected and clinically widespread used opioids. Codeine is often administered in order to give relief from minor or moderate pain, and is recommended as a step II analgesic in the WHO cancer pain ladder.1 Codeine is metabolized by CYP2D6 to morphine and a major part of codeine efficacy is believed executed after its degradation to morphine. Due to genetic variability individuals may be slow, extensive or ultrarapid metabolizers of codeine. Slow metabolizers of codeine have less effects from codeine while fast metabolizers may have increased efficacy and toxicity.2, 3 This variability is also connected to race; Caucasian having about 10% of individuals as slow metabolizers while Africans have a higher number of patients who are extensive or rapid metabolizers.4 The genetic variability related to codeine is clinically recognized as relevant, but can easily be bypassed by simply replacing codeine with low dose of a WHO step III opioid such as morphine.5 The latter perhaps a pharmacological better alternative, but often not used due to legislations and patients barriers. Oxycodone is primarily metabolized by CYP3A4 to the inactive metabolite noroxycodone. However, the pharmacology of oxycodone is complex with 6-keto reduction to the inactive metabolites α- and β-oxycodol, by CYP2D6 to the active metabolite oxymorphone, and finally indirectly a conversion by CYP2D6 from noroxycodone to the active metabolite noroxymorpho- MINERVA ANESTESIOLOGICA March 2013 ABSTRACT ne.6, 7 The gene coding the CYP3A4 enzyme has several polymorphisms, but there is no evidence for a clinical relevant influence on oxycodone efficacy. Reduction in CYP2D6 activity is shown to lower the serum concentrations of oxymorphone and noroxymorphone in cancer pain patients. However, this did not result in changes in the symptom reported by the patients.8 The most important metabolic pathway for fentanyl is metabolism by CYP3A4 to the inactive metabolite norfentanyl.9 The influence from genetic variability in the CYP3A4 gene on fentanyl pharmacokinetics and on clinical efficacy is not well studied and there are no conclusive data. Methadone has a complex pharmacology and is metabolized by several CYP enzymes including CYP3A4, CYP2C8 and CYP2D6.10 There is some evidence for that poor metabolizers have an improved success rate in methadone maintenance programs compared to CYP2D6 ultrarapid metabolizers,11 but there is no convincing clinical evidence suggesting that genetic variability related to methadone metabolism is important for methadone induced pain relief. Morphine is primarily conjugated to the active metabolite morphine-6-glucoronide (M6G) and the inactive metabolite morphine-3-glucuronide. Other metabolites are also formed but these are not quantitatively important. During chronic administration of morphine M6G is present in higher concentrations than morphine and as M6G is the more potent agonist at the mu-opioid receptor, it is not surprising that M6G contributes to the analgesic effects from morphine.12 UGT2B7, UGT1A1 and UGT1A8 are enzymes that degrade morphine of which UGT2B7 has the quantitatively largest impact.13 UGT2B7 have several known and frequent polymorphisms, which in one study was shown to alter the morphine/metabolite ratios,14 a finding not reproduced in other populations.15 In a recent study two common haplotypes in the UGT1A1 gene predicted a reduced M6G/morphine ratio.16 However, no clinical implications for genetic variability related to metabolism of morphine have been established. In conclusion, variable metabolism of opioids may both increase and decrease opioid efficacy dependent on if the metabolite is clinically active or not. There are several well-established polymorphisms in the genes that code enzymes which metabolite clinically used opioids. This renders these genes as candidate genes to explain some of the Vol. 79 - Suppl. 1 to No. 3 observed interindividual variability in opioid responses. Variability in the CYP2D6 gene is shown to be clinically relevant as slow and ultrarapid metabolizers show a decreased or an increased, respectively, codeine efficacy. For other opioids some results suggest that genetic variability influence the production of metabolites, but there are so far no convincing evidence that this changes the clinical results from opioid treatment. Consequently, with the exception of codeine there is no evidence that genetic variability related to metabolism is a factor to consider during clinical decision making. References 1. World Health Organisation. Cancer pain relief. Geneva: WHO; 1996. 2. Poulsen L, Riishede L, Brosen K, Clemensen S, Sindrup SH. Codeine in post-operative pain. Study of the influence of sparteine phenotype and serum concentration of morphine and morphine-6-glucuronide. Eur J Clin Pharmacol 1998;54:451-4. 3. Ferreirós N, Dresen S, Hermanns-Clausen M, Auwaerter V, Thierauf A, Müller C et al. Fatal and severe codeine intoxication in 3-year-old twins--interpretation of drug and metabolite concentrations. Int J Legal Med 2009;123:38794. 4. Aklillu E, Persson I, Bertilsson L, Johansson I, Rodrigues F, Ingelman-Sundberg M. Frequent distribution of ultrarapid metabolizers of debrisoquine in an ethiopian population carrying duplicated and multiduplicated functional CYP2D6 alleles. J Pharmacol Exp Ther 1996;278:441-6. 5. Caraceni A, Hanks G, Kaasa S, Bennett MI, Brunelli C, Cherny N, et al. Use of opioid analgesics in the treatment of cancer pain: evidence-based recommendations from the EAPC. The lancet oncology 2012;13:e58-e68. 6. Lalovic B, Kharasch ED, Hoffer C, Risler L, Liu-Chen L-Y, Shen DD. Pharamacokinetics and phramacodynamics of oral oxycodone in healthy human subjects: Role of circulating active metabolites. Clin Pharmacol Ther 2006;79:461-79. 7. Lalovic B, Phillps B, Risler LL, Howald W, Shen DD. Quantitative contribution of CYP2D6 and CYP3A4 to oxycodone metabolsim in human liver and intestinal microsomes. Drug Metab Dispos 2004;32:447-54. 8. Andreassen TN, Eftedal I, Klepstad P, Davies A, Bjordal K, Lundström S, et al. Do CYP2D6 genotypes reflect oxycodone requirements for cancer patients treated for cancer pain? A cross-sectional multicentre study. Eur J Clin Pharmacol 2011;68:55-64. 9. Labroo RB, Paine MF, Thummel KE, Kharasch ED. Fentanyl metabolism by human hepatic and intestinal cytochrome P450 3A4: Implications for interindividual variability in disposition, efficacy, and drug effects. Drug Metab Dispos 1997;25:1072-80. 10. Wang JS, DeVane CL. Involvement of CYP3A4, CYP2C8, and CYP2D6 in the metabolism of (R)- and (S)-methadone in vitro. Drug Metab Dispos 2003;31:742-7. 11. Eap CB, Broly F, Mino A et al. Cytochrome P450 2D6 genotype and methadone steady-state concentrations. J Clin Psychopharmacol 2001;21:229-34. 12. Klepstad P, Kaasa S, Borchgrevink PC. Start of oral morphine to cancer patients: effective serum morphine concentrations and contribution from morphine-6-glucuro- MINERVA ANESTESIOLOGICA 5 ABSTRACT nide to the analgesia produced by morphine. Eur J Clin Pharmacol 2000;55:713-9. 13. Balliet RM, Chen G, Gallagher CJ, Dellinger RW, Sun D, Lazarus P. Characterization of UGTs active against SAHA and association between SAHA glucuronidation activity phenotype with UGT genotype. Cancer Res 2009;69: 2981-9. 14. Sawyer MB, Innoceti F, Das S, Cheng C, Ramirez J, Pantle-Fisher FH et al. A pharmacogenetic study of uridine disphosphate-glucuronosyltransferase 2B7 in patients receiving morphine. Clin Pharmacol Ther. 2003;73:566-74. 15. Holthe M, Rakvåg TN, Klepstad P, Idle JR, Kaasa S, Krokan HE et al. Sequence variation in the UDP-glucurosyltransferase 2B7 (UGT2B7) gene: identification of 10 novel single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) and analysis of their relevance to morphine glucuronidation in cancer patients. Pharmacogenomics J 2003;3:17-26. 16. Fladvad T, Klepstad P, Langaas M, Dale O, Kaasa S, Caraceni A et al. Variability in UDP-glucuronosyltransferase genes and morphine metabolism. Observations from a cross-sectional multicenter study in advanced cancer patients with pain. Pharmacogenetic Genomics 2012; In press. Male and female: differences in opioid response and pain perception Roger B. Fillingim, Ph.D. University of Florida, College of Dentistry, and North Florida/ South Georgia Veterans Health System, Gainesville, Florida 32610-3628, USA Research on sex and gender differences in pain and its treatment has proliferated over the past two decades. Epidemiologic studies demonstrate that women are at increased risk for several chronic pain disorders. Also, in the general population women report more frequent pain than do men, and findings from the clinical setting suggest that women may experience more severe pain than men. These sex differences in clinical pain have led investigators to compared laboratory pain responses across sexes to explore the possibility that women and men may differ in their pain sensitivity. Laboratory studies demonstrate sex differences in pain perception, with females consistently demonstrating greater sensitivity to experimentally evoked pain, though the magnitude of sex differences varies across studies. In addition, an increasing number of clinical and experimental studies have investigated sex differences in responses to opioid analgesics. Findings from these studies indicate that women and men may respond differently to opioids, both in terms of analgesic and non-analgesic effects of these drugs. However, this literature is far from consistent, with findings varying sub- 6 stantially based on study methodology. These findings refer to quantitative sex differences (i.e. does the magnitude of pain or analgesia differ across sexes?), which have been the primary emphasis of prior research on sex, gender and pain. However, it is of equal if not greater importance to consider qualitative sex differences. That is, do the factors mediating pain and analgesic responses differ in women versus men? Increasing evidence indicates the presence of such qualitative sex differences. For example, several findings in both non-human and human subjects suggest that genetic associations with pain and analgesia may be sex-dependent. Moreover, psychological factors have been differentially associated with pain responses across sex. Such findings are of particular interest, because they suggest the possibility of fundamentally different pain modulatory systems in females and males, which may require sex-specific tailoring of treatment. These areas of research will be reviewed, and the clinical implications of sex differences in pain and analgesic responses will be discussed. Tapentadol: two mechanisms of action. A new pharmacologic class on the horizon? Ralf Baron Division of Neurological Pain Research and Therapy, Department of Neurology, Christian-Albrechts-Universität Kiel, Kiel, Germany Tapentadol has been developed to combine µ-opioid receptor agonism (MOR) and noradrenaline reuptake inhibition (NRI) in a single molecule with the rationale to produce an ‘opioid-sparing’ effect; i.e. to produce fewer opioidrelated side effects than classical µ-opioid receptor agonists at a distinct level of analgesia. Based on these mechanisms of action, it was hypothesized that tapentadol is effective in nociceptive as well as neuropathic pain states. From preclinical testing tapentadol is known to have a high analgesic potency in acute nociceptive and chronic neuropathic pain. In line with the MOR-NRI concept clinical trials have confirmed tapentadol’s analgesic effectiveness in patients with neuropathic as well as nociceptive pain states, i.e. osteoarthritis, diabetic painful neuropathy and lumbar back pain. In the following experience with tapentadol in back pain and neuropathic pain will be summarized. MINERVA ANESTESIOLOGICA March 2013 ABSTRACT Neuropathic pain Tapentadol has shown efficacy in patients with painful diabetic polyneuropathy known as one standard model to test efficacy in neuropathic pain: This was proven in two phase III, placebocontrolled randomized-withdrawal study with a 12 week tapentadol PR treatment at doses of 100250 mg bid, in which tapentadol PR also provided significant improvements in pain versus placebo. Following the 3 weeks open-label treatment with tapentadol PR (100-250 mg bid), patients who continued to receive tapentadol PR maintained their improvement in health status over the 12 weeks of the study significantly better than patients who were switched to placebo. Lumbar back pain Clinical trials have also confirmed tapentadol’s analgesic effectiveness in patients with chronic low back pain with fewer adverse events than with doses of oxycodone producing comparable analgesia: In a phase III trial involving 981 patients with low back pain, tapentadol PR 100 to 250 mg bid provided effective pain relief similar to oxycodone CR 20-50 mg, but showed better gastrointestinal tolerability compared to oxycodone (nausea 20.1 vs. 34.5 %; vomiting 9.1 vs. 19.2 %; constipation 13.8 vs. 26.8 %; p<0.05) and lesser treatment discontinuations due to AEs. Treatment with tapentadol PR was associated with significant improvements in overall health and physical health status : Analyses of the SF36 results showed that patients in the tapentadol PR group had significantly greater improvements in 4 of the 8 health dimensions compared with patients in the placebo group: physical functioning, role-physical, bodily pain, and vitality (P <0.05 for all comparisons), whereas oxycodone CR was significantly different from placebo in only 2 of these domains (role-physical and bodily pain; P <0.001 for both comparisons). Nociceptive and neuropathic back pain Different pathophysiological mechanisms are thought to operate in chronic back pain. Nociceptive and neuropathic pain components can be distinguished. Neuropathic pain may be caused by lesions of nociceptive sprouts within the degenerated disc (local-neuropathic), mechanical compression of the nerve root (mechanical-neuropathic root pain) or by action of inflammatory mediators (inflammatory-neuropathic root pain) originat- Vol. 79 - Suppl. 1 to No. 3 ing from the degenerative disc even without any mechanical compression. Since different paingenerating mechanisms possibly underlie chronic back pain the term mixed pain syndrome was established. It is a diagnostic challenge to identify which components are prominent and to estimate the impact of the different pain types. This knowledge is essential for tailoring treatment to the individual patient. The PainDetect Questionnaire is a reliable screening tool to detect the neuropathic pain component in patients with chronic back pain with a high sensitivity and specificity. In a cohort of 8000 patients with chronic back pain a prevalence of 37% of a predominant neuropathic component was found. Furthermore, an immense impact of (co)existing neuropathic pain on the occurrence and severity of different co-morbid symptoms such as depression, panic/anxiety- and sleep disorders, functionality or even on pain intensity was demonstrated. Patients with a neuropathic pain component suffer more and more severe than those without, seriously affecting their quality of life. The data provide further evidence for the impact of neuropathic pain on healthcare resource utilisation. The treatment of chronic low back pain is a challenge because of the high impact on patients’ quality of life, the range of different causes, the frequent presence of neuropathic components, lack of consensus on best practice, and opioid-related side effects. One strategy to cope with the limitations of current treatment options is to take a multimechanistic approach using two or more analgesic agents with different mechanisms of action to produce additive or synergistic effects. As mentioned above tapentadol has been developed to combine µ-opioid receptor agonism and noradrenaline reuptake inhibition in a single molecule and because of this it should be assumed that tapentadol is effective in both, nociceptive and neuropathic back pain components. In an open-label, phase 3b study the effectiveness and tolerability of tapentadol prolonged release for severe, chronic low back pain with or without a neuropathic component was evaluated that was inadequately managed in patients taking World Health Organization (WHO) Step I or II analgesics or who were not regularly treated with analgesics. Patients received tapentadol prolonged release (50-250 mg bid) during a 5-week titration and 7-week maintenance period. The painDETECT questionnaire was used to define subsets of MINERVA ANESTESIOLOGICA 7 ABSTRACT patients based on the probability of a neuropathic component to their low back pain as “negative,” “unclear,” or “positive”. In the painDETECT negative (n = 49) and unclear/positive (n = 126) subsets, respectively, mean (SD) changes in pain intensity from baseline to Week 6 were −2.4 (2.18) and −3.0 (2.07; both P <0.0001). Among patients who had not received prior WHO Step II treatment, lower doses of tapentadol prolonged release were generally required with increasing likelihood of a neuropathic pain component. Based on the painDETECT questionnaire and the Neuropathic Pain Symptom Inventory, tapentadol prolonged release treatment was also associated with significant improvements in neuropathic pain symptoms and with decreases in the number of pain attacks and the duration of spontaneous pain in the last 24 hours in patients with low back pain with a neuropathic pain component (painDETECT positive or unclear). The most common treatment-emergent adverse events (incidence ≥10%, n = 176) were nausea, dizziness, headache, dry mouth, fatigue, constipation, diarrhea, nasopharyngitis, and somnolence. References 1. Afilalo M, Etropolski MS, Kuperwasser B et al. Efficacy and safety of tapentadol extended release compared with oxycodone controlled release for the management of moderate to severe chronic pain related to osteoarthritis of the knee: a randomized, double-blind, placebo- and active-controlled phase III study. Clin Drug Investig 2010;30:489-505. 2. Baron R, Binder A, Wasner G. Neuropathic pain: diagnosis, pathophysiological mechanisms, and treatment. Lancet Neurol. 2010;9(8):807-19. 3. Buynak R, Shapiro DY, Okamoto A et al. Efficacy and safety of tapentadol extended release for the management of chronic low back pain: results of a prospective, randomized, double-blind, placebo- and activecontrolled Phase III study. Expert Opin Pharmacother 2010;11:1787-804. 4. Freynhagen R, Baron R, Gockel U, Tolle TR. painDETECT: a new screening questionnaire to identify neuropathic components in patients with back pain. Curr Med Res Opin 2006;22:1911-20. 5. Schmidt CO, Schweikert B, Wenig CM et al. Modelling the prevalence and cost of back pain with neuropathic components in the general population. Eur J Pain 2009; 6. Schroder W, Tzschentke TM, Terlinden R et al. Synergistic Interaction between the Two Mechanisms of Action of Tapentadol in Analgesia. J Pharmacol Exp Ther 2011;337:312-20. 7. Schwartz S, Etropolski M, Shapiro DY et al. Safety and efficacy of tapentadol ER in patients with painful diabetic peripheral neuropathy: results of a randomizedwithdrawal, placebo-controlled trial. Curr Med Res Opin 2011;27:151-62. 8. Steigerwald I, Müller M, Davies A, Samper D, Sabatowski R, Baron R, Rozenberg S, Szczepanska-Szerej A, Gatti A, 8 Kress HG. Effectiveness and safety of tapentadol prolonged release for severe, chronic low back pain with or without a neuropathic pain component: results of an open-label, phase 3b study. Curr Med Res Opin. 2012 Jun;28(6):91136. Oxycodone and naloxone: a new combination for a better chronic pain control in elderly people CE Minella1, M Di Matteo1, M Allegri1,2 1Pain Therapy Service, Fondazione IRCCS Policlinico San Matteo Pavia, Italy, 2Department of Medical, Surgical, Diagnostic and Paediatric Sciences University of Pavia, Italy Chronic pain recognizes several pathophysiological mechanisms with complex interactions with different patient’s features. “Pain disease” should be recognized as a challenging major health and research problem remaining one of the most costly and investigated clinical entity in our society (Pizzo and Clark, 2012). Osteoarthritis is a common joint disorder among the older adult population representing one of the most common cause of chronic pain syndromes (it affects as many as one in every four adults over 65 years of age). Severe chronic pain is associated with this disease contributing substantially to patient’s disability and impacting negatively on motor function, sleep, mood, and quality of life. Guidelines for the management of symptoms associated with osteoarthritis recommend, as first-line therapy options, physical therapy, patient education, weight loss and exercise programs; pharmacologic therapy is recommended for patients who do not experience sufficient pain relief from non-pharmacologic measures alone. Usually, analgesics, as paracetamol, and nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs) are used. However, paracetamol could result inadequate to control a severe, long-lasting pain and, on the other side, NSAIDs should be used carefully, due their gastrointestinal and cardiovascular adverse events. Furthermore Doherty et al., comparing ibuprofen, paracetamol and combination of paracetamol/ibuprofen in the management of chronic knee pain, found that paracetamol in combination with NSAID shows only modest short-term benefits (without any long-term effect) and, when administered alone (3 g/day), may cause similar degrees of blood loss as ibuprofen 1200 mg/day. Finally, the com- MINERVA ANESTESIOLOGICA March 2013 ABSTRACT bination of the two medications appeared to be additive in terms of blood loss (Doherty et al., 2011). The appropriate prescribing of analgesics in the older people with osteoarthritis is difficult: polypharmacy, co-morbid conditions and poor compliance occur very frequently. In general, elderly are more likely to intake several drugs: a survey conducted in 2004 found that 40% of elderly take nine or more concurrent agents. Coping with these premises, pharmacologic treatment of osteoarthritis pain should be planned carefully, looking at clinical conditions and comorbidities and knowing properly the pharmacologic treatment. Several trials have showed opioids efficacy and tolerability in the treatment of moderate-severe chronic osteoarthritis pain (Taylor et al., 2012). The WHO analgesic ladder approach is not as it does not consider patient’s own characteristics and pain features. Nevertheless, opioid therapy may be associated with some side effects, such as nausea/vomiting, dizziness, itching, immunologic and hormonal changes and opioid induced bowel dysfunction (OBD). The frequency and severity of central side effects constantly decreases over time. In contrast, OBD, mediated by interaction with peripheral μ receptors, could persist for the whole duration of opioid treatment. The symptoms of OBD include constipation, decreased gastric emptying, abdominal cramping, spasm, bloating, delayed gastrointestinal (GI) transit and formation of hard dry stools (Panchal et al., 2007). OBD often results in insufficient pain therapy in many patients. Laxatives are commonly used to treat OBD; however, as they have a non-specific mechanism of action, therapy often requires combinations of different agents. Aggressive laxative therapy may itself result in side effects, contributing to poor treatment compliance and reducing quality of life for patients already coping with a chronic, debilitating illness. Use of peripherally acting opioid antagonists has been identified as a promising approach; these agents specifically target GI receptors without limiting the central analgesic activity of opioids. Naloxone is a peripherally acting opioid antagonist with low systemic bioavailability (<3%) following oral administration. Consequently, orally administered naloxone acts almost exclusively on GI opioid receptors. Hence, targeting peripheral receptors whilst sparing central analgesic func- Vol. 79 - Suppl. 1 to No. 3 tion, through combining naloxone with oxycodone, has emerged as promising approach to treat OBD. To overcome this disabling side-effect, in recent years combined formulations (opioids+naloxone) have been developed. Oxycodone has been proven as one of the most effective opioid in several pain syndromes, such as cancer-related, neuropathic and osteoarthritis-related pain. Moreover oxycodone is considered a useful alternative to morphine in the treatment of visceral pain syndromes. Taylor and colleagues reviewed the available literature about the effectiveness of oxycodone in the treatment of osteoarthritis pain in placebo-controlled and comparative trials; the authors found the evidence that oxycodone is safe and effective and significantly reduces moderate to severe chronic pain in osteoarthritis patients. The combined prolonged release oxycodonenaloxone has been demonstrated to provide same effective analgesia of oxycodone but to improve bowel guaranteeing long-term efficacy and tolerability in the management of moderate to severe chronic non-malignant and malignant pain (Lowenstein et al., 2008; Sandner-Kiesling et al., 2010). Finally, Hermanns and colleagues have published encouraging results on the effectiveness and safety of oxycodone/naloxone in the management of neuropathic pain In conclusion, this association guarantees the optimal effectiveness of opioids in the treatment but significantly improving e and reducing those side effects that limit the long term use. References 1. Pizzo PA, Clark NM. Alleviating suffering 101--pain relief in the United States. N Engl J Med 2012;366(3):197-9. 2. Doherty M, Hawkey C, Goulder M, et al. A randomised controlled trial of ibuprofen, paracetamol or a combination tablet of ibuprofen/paracetamol in community-derived people with knee pain. Ann Rheum Dis 2011;70(9):1534-41. 3. Taylor R Jr, Raffa RB, Pergolizzi JV Jr. Controlled release formulation of oxycodone in patients with moderate to severe chronic osteoarthritis: a critical review of the literature. J Pain Res 2012;5:77-87. 4. Panchal SJ, Müller-Schwefe P, Wurzelmann JI. Opioidinduced bowel dysfunction: prevalence, pathophysiology and burden. Int J Clin Pract 2007;61(7):1181-7. 5. Simpson K, Leyendecker P, Hopp M et al. Fixed-ratio combination oxycodone/naloxone compared with oxycodone alone for the relief of opioid-induced constipation in moderate-to-severe noncancer pain. Curr Med Res Opin 2008;24(12):3503-12. 6. Sandner-Kiesling A, Leyendecker P, Hopp M et al. Longterm efficacy and safety of combined prolonged-release oxycodone and naloxone in the management of non-cancer chronic pain. Int J Clin Pract 2010;64(6):763-74. MINERVA ANESTESIOLOGICA 9 ABSTRACT Mechanisms of post-opioid exposure hyperalgesia and tolerance William Maixner Department of Endodontics, Center for Neurosensory Disorders, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, North Carolina 27599-7455, USA While opioids are effective in ameliorating pain, it is recognized that there is substantial variation amongst individuals with respect to the pharmacodynamic properties of opioids, including the desired analgesic response. One important event that contributes to variations in the analgesic responses to opioids is the previous exposure to opioids. Both acute and chronic exposure to opioids produce pharmacological tolerance and a phenomenon commonly referred to as “opioid induced hyperalgesia” (OIH). Within recent years, several neural mechanisms have been advanced to explain OIH and the pharmacological tolerance to opioids. OIH and pharmacological tolerance have been associated with cellular signaling through toll-like receptor 4, β2-adrenergic receptors, β-arrestin, as well as through recently identified slice variants of the human µ-opioid receptor. These, and several other candidate pathways, have been proposed to play a pivotal role in the attenuation of opioid analgesia and appear to mediate OIH. Dr. Maixner will present and discuss several of the underling cellular mechanisms that have been proposed to mediate OIH and tolerance. Rotation of opioids: from theory to practice V Rollason, Lucien Roulet, C Samer, Y Daali, M Besson, V Piguet, M Escher, P Dayer, J A Desmeules Division of Clinical Pharmacology and Toxicology and Multidisciplinary Pain Center, University Hospitals of Geneva, Switzerland Introduction Opioids are widely used to treat cancerous and non-cancerous pain. Their efficacy is not questioned but they can cause unbearable side effects that limit their use. It is in this context that a rotation of opioids can be a useful strategy. To date no randomised controlled trial has evaluated the pertinence of opioid rotations or 10 the comparative efficacy of different methods of rotation, mainly due to methodological pitfalls related to the population to be studied and the pharmacokinetic differences of the different opioids. Therefore opioid rotation in clinical practice is based on case-reports, retrospective studies and, at the best, prospective non-randomised studies. Rationale When treating severe pain, the maximal doses of opioid is determined by the balance between efficacy and occurrence of adverse drug reactions (ADR). The first step is to deal with the ADR by correcting the contributory causes, adapting the comedications, treating the side effects, using adjuvant medications or changing the administration route of the opioid. When these different steps are insufficient, an opioid rotation can be a good alternative, bearing in mind that the goal is to reduce side-effects whilst keeping the analgesic efficacy. Six different opioids have been described in the literature for rotations: morphine, hydromorphone, oxycodone, buprenorphine, fentanyl and methadone. Several hypotheses have been suggested to explain the improvement of the benefit/risk balance when changing the opioid treatment. The first assumption is based on the different affinities for the opioid receptors. There are three different opioid receptors, namely μ (mu), δ (delta) and κ (kappa). Each opioid and its potential active metabolite bind to these receptors with their own affinity and sensitivity. For example, the binding profile to the μ receptor varies by a factor of 200 to 300 between the main opioids. A rotation allows to play with these characteristics and reach a better analgesia with less ADRs. Secondly, the pharmacokinetic profiles of the opioids differ in such a way that the treatment can be adapted to the comedications and comorbidities of the patient. Regarding the absorption and distribution processes, some opioids, such as morphine, are P-glycoprotein (Pgp) substrates. Pgp is a transmembrane transport protein that modulates transport across many tissue barriers, primarily gastrointestinal and cerebral. Therefore, inhibition or induction of Pgp by other medications or environmental factors may theoretically modulate the analgesic effect by changing the concentrations of the opioid in the blood and the brain. As for the hepatic metabolism, some opioids depend on MINERVA ANESTESIOLOGICA March 2013 ABSTRACT phase I enzymes (cytochrome P450) and others on phase II enzymes (glucuronidation). Again, induction and inhibition of these metabolic pathways due to the patient’s comedications and comorbidities can affect the efficacy and ADR profile of a specific opioid whereas another opioid would be the drug of choice. Finally, several genetic polymorphisms may contribute to modulate the response to opioids. A genetic polymorphism is considered when differences in gene expression is observed with a frequency greater than 1% of the population. Interindividual variability in response to opioids in terms of efficacy and safety is in part due of this phenomenon. The major genetic polymorphism to take into account when opioid treatment is considered it that of cytochromes P450. A deficiency in these enzyme systems (poor metabolisers) can lead to the accumulation of the parent drug with the occurrence of ADRs or, for an opioid that has to be bioactivated through these cytochromes, such as oxycodone, a decreased effectiveness. Conversely, in patients that are ultra-rapid metabolisers, the parent drug will be inefficacious whereas, for the opioids that have to be bioactivated, ADRs could occur. At the present time, the findings from studies describing the clincal effect of genetic polymorphisms of Pgp, μ receptor and UDP-glucuronosyltransferase (UGT2B7, enzyme responsible for the conjugation of morphine) on efficacy and/or ADRs are conflicting. To date, pharmacogenetics in pain medicine has been used retrospectively to identify and explain the causes of abnormal responses (either inefficacy or toxicity) in indiv idual patients. Although it may appear premat ure to recommend the application of a single genetic test before the start of the treatment, pharmacogenetics might already help to ident ify the right analgesic for the right patient more than the right effective and safe dose, such as avoiding prodrug opioids in PMs for CYP2D6 as well as in UMs concomitantly taking a CYP3A inhibitor. Testing could support opioid rotations in specific circumstances and has the potential to increase the efficacy while reducing the toxicity of therapeutic agents, simultaneously avoiding prescription of expensive, useless medications in individual patients. This may also ultimately help to design more useful pain medications with better efficacy and lower toxicity profiles. Vol. 79 - Suppl. 1 to No. 3 Opioid rotation in practice An opioid rotation should be considered only after other potentially treatable causes for the inefficacy or the ADRs have been considered: Knowledge of the pharmacodynamics and pharmacokinetics of the different opioids, as well as the patient comorbidities and comedications, allows the choice of the most appropriate opioid because the rotation should be individualised and cannot be based on predefined criteria. Three key elements regarding the pharmacology of opioids are taken into account: the administration route, the possible drug-drug interactions and the dose. Considering the administration route, the oral route should always be preferred. When oral intake is impossible or there is doubt about the absorption, subcutaneous administration is preferred unless an implantable chamber or a central venous access is available. Transdermal administration is a good option when the analgesic treatment is stabilized. For drug-drug interactions, opioid substrates of cytochrome P450 isoenzymes are likely to see their effectiveness and tolerance affected by drug inducers or inhibitors of these enzymes. When searching for the correct dose, many tables are available for equivalent analgesic potency between opioids. These data are however based on a low level of evidence and it is risky to strictly apply the suggested conversion rates, that must be taken as general indicators. In clinical practice, security should be a priority and therefore the lowest conversion coefficients should be applied. Finally, to better adapt the dose of the new treatment to the patient, it is important to re-evaluate its safety and efficacy in steady-state conditions, after four half-lives, and then regularly. Conclusion The indication for an opioid rotation is based on the fact that the pharmacodynamic and pharmacokinetic profiles of opioids differ. This rotation should be chosen after a careful evaluation that includes the search and correction of metabolic factors, the adjustment of the (co-) medications and the overall context and co-morbidities of the patient. The particular conditions of each patient (comorbidities, comedications) and the characteristics of the different molecules available dictate the selection of the opioid of choice. MINERVA ANESTESIOLOGICA 11 ABSTRACT Neuropathic pain: a challenging entity with complex mechanisms G. Cruccu, A. Truini EFNS Panel on Neuropathic Pain and Department of Neurology and Psychiatry, Sapienza University, Rome, Italy It is largely acknowledged that multiple and complex pathophysiological mechanisms may be at play in neuropathic pains, although these have been mainly demonstrated in animal studies and much less in patients (Costigan er al. 2009). The most recent pathophysiological advances regard specification of sub-types of membrane receptors or neurotransmitter mechanisms in animal models. Although such information is by all means important because it may be useful for the development of future drugs, it may be less relevant in clinical practice. Clinical history, sensory testing, and laboratory investigations, however, are often helpful to determine the nature of the nerve damage, i.e. demyelination and peripheral axonal loss, or cell death and central denervation. 1. Neural mechanisms of sensitization in tissue damage or inflammation (with no nerve damage) Tissue injury or inflammation increase nociceptor activity through inflammatory mediators released by the damaged tissue or carried by the blood stream (histamine, serotonin, bradykinin, prostaglandins, etc); the nociceptors themselves release transmitters, such as substance P, CGRP, that increase the local inflammation (neurogenic inflammation) (Fields et al., 1998). These events induce local vasodilation and lower the nociceptor threshold, thus inducing thermal and mechanical hyperalgesia (area of primary hyperalgesia). This primary area tends to expand, through the antidromic invasions of collaterals of nociceptors (axon reflex). The term “peripheral sensitization” should be attributed to the nociceptors activated by the initial injury directly or through the axon reflex. An area of hyperalgesia also develops in the undamaged tissue adjacent to the site of injury (area of secondary hyperalgesia). The area of secondary hyperalgesia arises because the ongoing spontaneous activity from the primary nociceptors sensitizes second-order nociceptive neurons (central sensitization) [2](Treede et al., 1992). In sensitised second-order nociceptive neurons receptive fields enlarge and responses to afferent impulses increase. In this pathological condition, Aβ lowthreshold mechanoreceptors (LTM), normally re- 12 sponsible for touch sensations, can activate secondorder nociceptive neurons, thus causing pain (i.e. allodynia). The role of non-nociceptive Aβ-fibres in mediating allodynia was shown by selective intraneural microstimulation of LTMs, related to Aβ-fibres, which elicited a sensation of touch in normal skin but became painful when the receptive fields were part of an area of secondary “hyperalgesia” after adjacent injection of capsaicin. In turn, this LTM-mediated secondary “hyperalgesia” was completely abolished by A-fibre conduction block (Koltzenburg et al., 1992). However the mechanisms underlying secondary hyperalgesia and allodynia are far from being completely ascertained. An alternative and opposite view suggests that allodynia could reflect the lowered mechanical threshold in sensitised primary nociceptors. This view is supported by several neurophysiological studies showing that in patients with painful neuropathies allodynia is related to abnormal C nociceptor firing triggered by light mechanical touch (Truini et al., 2012). 2. Mechanisms of neuropathic pain in patients without sensory and axonal loss Many of the above events also take place in neuropathic pain. Neurogenic inflammation, as measured by basal and capsaicin-induced CGRP release from the skin, is increased in rats with experimental diabetic neuropathy compared with controls, indicating an increased sensitivity of C-fibres to capsaicin and related stimuli (Zimmermann, 2001). There is now good evidence that uninjured fibres within an injured nerve take part in the signalling of pain, exhibiting spontaneous activity and sensitization. The high-frequency bursts generated ectopically are thought to correspond to the paroxysmal attacks of shooting, stabbing, or electric-shock-like pains. In addition to the sensitized peripheral terminals, the cell bodies and the region near the dorsal ganglion may easily generate spontaneous bursts. Several studies demonstrated that the ectopic impulses generated in inflamed, compressed, or demyelinating nerve fibres are associated with an up-regulation of mRNA for specific voltagegated sodium channels in nociceptive primary afferents. The abnormal expression of these sodium channels leads to hyperexcitability of primary afferents (both lowered threshold and higher firing rate) (Wood et al., 2004). Central sensitization is more likely to develop in conditions that induce ectopic activity along nerve MINERVA ANESTESIOLOGICA March 2013 ABSTRACT fibres because of the high frequency of impulses of the paroxysmal bursts, a frequency that cannot be reached by receptors or post-synaptic neurons: it is the very-short interval between afferent impulses that produces the excessive membrane depolarization that makes calcium pouring into the postsynaptic neuron. 3. Mechanisms of neuropathic pain that imply sensory and axonal loss Some of the above mechanisms (e.g. ectopic activity) may also take place in peripheral or central neurological diseases that typically induce axonal degeneration. Animal models of peripheral nerve damage showed that the regenerating sprouts of damaged axons develop spontaneous activity and an increased sensitivity to chemical, thermal and mechanical stimuli. Consistently with findings in animals, microelectrode recordings from transected nerves in human amputees with phantom limb pain revealed spontaneous afferent activity. In these patients tapping the neuroma increases pain and enhances the afferent discharges. Injection of lidocaine into the neuroma blocks the tap-induced nerve activity ant its related pain (though it does not relieve spontaneous ongoing pain) (Fields et al.,1998). Other mechanisms, however, may take place only in patients with axonal degeneration and sensory loss. For example, mild afferent signal loss might induce major changes in dorsal horn neuron excitability. When large Aβ-fibre input decreases, the interneurons that inhibit nociceptive neurons become hypoactive (loss of afferent inhibition) (Koike et al., 2008). In neurological diseases characterized by degeneration of the axons projecting onto the dorsal horn neurons (e.g. neuronopathies, sensory root avulsion), the fall of presynaptic terminal buttons leaves the post-synaptic receptors exposed to neurotransmitters and postsynaptic neurons begin to fire spontaneously (deafferentation supersensitivity) (Zimmermann, 2001). Hypoactivity of the descending antinociceptive systems (loss of descending inhibition) has been often proposed but never demonstrated (Porreca et al., 2001). References 1. Costigan M, Scholz J, Woolf CJ. Neuropathic pain: a maladaptive response of the nervous system to damage. Annu Rev Neurosci. 2009;32:1-32. 2. Fields HL, Rowbotham M, Baron R. Postherpetic neuralgia: irritable nociceptors and deafferentation. Neurobiol Dis. 1998;5:209-27. 3. Koike H, Iijima M, Mori K, et al. Neuropathic pain cor- Vol. 79 - Suppl. 1 to No. 3 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. relates with myelinated fibre loss and cytokine profile in POEMS syndrome. J Neurol Neurosurg Psychiatry 2008;79:1171-9. Koltzenburg M, Lundberg LE, Torebjörk HE. Dynamic and static components of mechanical hyperalgesia in human hairy skin. Pain 1992;51:207-219. Porreca F, Burgess SE, Gardell LR, et al. Inhibition of neuropathic pain by selective ablation of brainstem medullary cells expressing the mu-opioid receptor. J Neurosci. 2001;21:5281-8. Treede RD, Meyer RA, Raja SN, et al. Peripheral and central mechanisms of cutaneous hyperalgesia. Prog Neurobiol. 1992;38:397-421. Truini A, Biasiotta A, Di Stefano G, et al. Peripheral nociceptor sensitization mediates allodynia in patients with distal symmetric polyneuropathy. J Neurol. Oct 2012. Wood JN, Boorman JP, Okuse K, et al. Voltage-gated sodium channels and pain pathways. J Neurobiol 2004;61:55–71. Zimmermann M. Pathobiology of neuropathic pain. Eur J Pharmacol. 2001;429:23–37. Chronic pain: identifying underlying mechanisms that benefit from multimodal approaches Joseph Pergolizzi Department of Medicine, School of Medicine Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, MD, USA Pain processing occurs in the central nervous system (spinal cord and brain) and periphery.1 Although pain is a normal process, pathologic mechanisms may contribute to its transduction and perception.1 Neuroplastic changes in the pain processing can lead to changes in pain perception.1 Acute pain may be healthy and adaptive, allowing a protective reflexive response resolving with the healing of an injury.2 Other types of pain may be maladaptive; in fact, persistent pain ceases to have a protective function and becomes known for its disruptive effects.1, 2 Chronic pain syndromes occur when pain is not associated with identifiable injury or when pain extends beyond healing of the injury. Normal pain processing involves transmission of pain via ascending pathways, with modulation (either inhibitory or facilitatory) occurring via descending pathways.2 Numerous disease states involve persistent pain. Maladaptive pain states, including inflammatory/joint pain, neuropathic pain, and non-inflammatory/non-neuropathic pain often result from peripheral and central sensitization. Nociceptive, neuropathic and inflammatory pain are responses to different, possibly overlapping, stimuli and mechanisms, and have different characteristics. As chronic moderate to severe pain is often multifactorial and is associated MINERVA ANESTESIOLOGICA 13 ABSTRACT with plasticity of the nervous system, treatment decisions should take into account the underlying mechanisms. The rationale for mechanism-orientated treatment is that pain can be caused by multiple mechanisms, and is processed and modulated by multiple excitatory and inhibitory systems. The μ-opioid receptor system, which exerts an inhibitory effect on the spinal and supraspinal level, is mainly responsible for modulating acute nociceptive pain. In chronic pain, the relative contribution of the monoaminergic system increases via the descending pain pathway; generally, noradrenaline reduces pain, while serotonin has both inhibitory and facilitatory effects. Pain relief may be achieved either by blocking excitatory transmission or activating inhibitory systems. Thus the analgesic efficacy of drugs may differ according to the underlying mechanism(s). For example, opioids act both presynaptically and postsynaptically in the spinal cord as well as supraspinally, while tricyclic antidepressants reduce the reuptake of noradrenaline or serotonin via the descending pain pathway. Chronic pain often involves more than one causative mechanism, so combining with different mechanisms of action increases the probability of attenuating the pain signal. Two pain modulation systems (opioidergic and monoaminergic) are relevant in chronic pain; simultaneous activation of both may produce analgesic synergy. References 1. Scholz J, Woolf CJ. Can we conquer pain? Nat Neurosci. 2002;(5 suppl):1062-7. 2. Woolf CJ. Pain: moving from symptom control toward mechanism-specific pharmacologic management. Ann Intern Med. 2004;140:441-51. 3. Pergolizzi J. Chronic pain - moving from symptom control to mechanism-based treatment. Current Medical Research & Opinion 2011;27(10):2079-80. Centrally acting drugs and dependence circuits: a clinical point of view Michael R. Clark Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences, The Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Baltimore MD 21287-5371, USA. Brain systems that process reward can be separated into hedonic/liking and motivational/ wanting aspects. The former is mediated by the orbitofrontal cortex and opioids while the latter is predominantly a function of the ventral striatum 14 and dopamine. These systems may also manage similar aspects of the experience of pain and pain relief. The core reward circuitry has been described as an in-series circuit linking the ventral tegmental area, nucleus accumbens and ventral pallidum via the medial forebrain bundle. These circuits manage complex aspects of the experience of reward such as attention, expectation, motivation, risk-taking, and learning. Analgesics relieve pain. Independent of any direct euphoric effects of medications, the relief of pain is a reward with positive effects for the suffering organism. Local anesthetics activate ventral tegmental dopaminergic cells. This release of dopamine in the nucleus accumbens is associated with conditioned place preference behaviors in animal models of postsurgical pain. In humans with chronic low back pain, the administration of morphine was associated with dosage-correlated volumetric decreases in the right amygdala and increases in right hypothalamus, left inferior frontal gyrus, right ventral posterior cingulate, and right caudal pons. These changes persisted for months after the discontinuation of opioids. Adjuvant analgesics such as anticonvulsants and antidepressants can produce pain relief through a variety of pharmacological actions, especially within a hyperexcitable or sensitized nociceptive system. These pathophysiological mechanisms of chronic pain range from modified dynamics of voltage-gated sodium channels to modulating calcium ion influx for neurotransmitter release to changes in modulatory effects of monoamines like dopamine, serotonin, and norepinephrine. Interactions occur with parallel systems that affect anxiety and depression beyond the usual suffering or unpleasantness of pain. Habits are the choices that all of us deliberately make at some point and then stop thinking about but continue doing every day. The characteristics of habits include that they are easily intitiated, manifest automatic execution, produce results that are highly reinforcing and whose outcome is not questioned. The result is that the behavior is likely to be repeated. Habits save us effort, keep us from being overwhelmed by minute details of daily life, and allow us to ignore the insignificant. Habits exist as loops that begin with a cue that triggers an automatic action, a series of actions called a routine, and the reward, which is reinforcing such that this loop is formed and worth remembering for the future. As the cue and the reward become intertwined, anticipation and craving emerge signalling MINERVA ANESTESIOLOGICA March 2013 ABSTRACT that the habit has been successfully created. At this point, the craving is accompanied by a suspension of decision-making. The behavioral routine unfolds automatically. Bad habits divert our efforts from productive activities, distract us from significant details, and interfere with our ability to meet the demands of daily life. Allostasis is defined as the process of achieving stability through physiological or behavioral change such as drug addiction. Initially the drug elicits its primary and unconditioned reinforcing actions that are opposed and neutralized within the same neurobiological system. Later, between-system interactions develop. Repeated compromised activity in the dopaminergic system coupled with activation of the corticotropin releasing factor system during withdrawal have been hypothesized to create an allostatic load that results in the transition to drug addiction. Addiction is characterized by a compulsion to seek and take a drug, loss of control in limiting its intake, and the emergence of a negative emotional state when access to the drug in prevented, even when taking the drug is resulting in adverse consequences for the individual. Addiction is a disorder that progresses from impulsivity and positive reinforcement of drug taking to one of compulsivity associated more with negative reinforcement. Decreases in the salience of reward have been linked to deficient dopaminergic and GABA-ergic function in the ventral striatum along with increases in activity of brain stress systems in the amygdala. Discrete circuits are hypothesized to mediate the three stages of the addiction cycle: binge/intoxication, withdrawal/negative affect, and preoccupation/anticipation/craving. Each step results in a more widespread recruitment of circuits until a distributed network emerges. There is evidence to suggest that addiction is a result of the failure of the executive system that process reward, pain, stress, emotion, habits, and decision-making. The building of habits, particularly new habits that replace less effective ones is an important skill. Building new habits really relies on simple, obvious cues that represent universal triggers that are impossible to ignore. In addition, the rewards for a new habit are most likely to reinforce the routine if they are sought after and clearly defined. As habits become stronger, a sense of anticipation emerges. Now the pleasure of the reward begins to be experienced even before the routine is performed and the reward realized. In fact, if the anticipated reward is not provided, both frustration and desire Vol. 79 - Suppl. 1 to No. 3 build with focus and effort increased not only to achieve the reward itself but also to avoid the disappointment of not receiving it. Creating a new habit often is desired as a way of replacing or ending a bad habit. If the power of the bad habit is harnessed, the new habit is more likely to take hold. In other words, a new habit is easier to acquire if there is something familiar about the cue and the reward. It is the craving of the reward of the old habit that will increase the temptation to stop the new habit. Therefore, to change a habit, the old cue and reward are retained but a new routine is inserted. The process of change can be broken down into specific components: creating an awareness of cues, characterizing the reward, designing a competing response, and delivering the same reward. While these steps are concrete, the more elemental ingredient is a belief that the new habit will address the underlying cause of the old habit. This concept is developed by understanding why new habits fail, especially at critical moments. Belief itself becomes the fuel for believing first in change and then more specifically that life’s problems are solvable. NSAIDs and acetaminophen: which role in chronic pain management? William K. Schmidt, PhD CG Pharmaceuticals, Emeryville, CA, USA The first use of plants containing salicylates and other anti-inflammatory and antipyretic substances may be known only to antiquity, but the use of willow bark and salicylate-rich plants was recorded more than 3,500 years ago in the Ebers papyrus from the Pharonic period in Egypt. Not much had changed by the time that the New World was discovered by Columbus (1492) or the Lewis & Clark expedition (1803-1806) began the westward expansion in the United States. Willow bark tea used by Meriwether Lewis was known for its ability to reduce pain, fever, and inflammation. Aspirin, as an active ingredient, was introduced into pain medicine in 1899, but it was preceded by acetanilide (1896) and phenacetin (1887) as the first totally synthetic antipyretic analgesic drugs. While aspirin is still one of the most widely used drugs today, in particular for its anti-platelet cardioprotective properties, its use for children and for many postoperative procedures was replaced by acetaminophen (paracetamol) beginning in the 1950s since the lat- MINERVA ANESTESIOLOGICA 15 ABSTRACT ter does not inhibit platelets, enhance postoperative bleeding, or produce gastric ulcers. While over 30 synthetic anti-inflammatory, antipyretic analgesics have been introduced worldwide, with the greatest number of new drugs being introduced in the 1970s to 1990s, 10 have been withdrawn due to severe life-threatening adverse effects including methemoglobinemia (acetanilide), renal toxicity (phenacetin, suprofen), blood dyscrasias (phenylbutazone, oxphenbutazone), anaphylaxis (zomepirac), hepatotoxicity (benoxaprofen, bromfenac), and more recently, cardiovascular toxicity that can lead to an elevated risk of myocardial infarctions and strokes (rofecoxib, valdecoxib). In the United States, all NSAIDs including drugs sold over-thecounter in pharmacies and convenience stores now carry a black-box warning indicating that the lowest doses should be taken for the shortest period of time to reduce the risk of severe cardiovascular toxicity. The advent of the COX-2 selective drugs in the late 1990s initially seemed to provide us with a way to achieve the desired anti-inflammatory, analgesic, and antipyretic activity of NSAID drugs without the risk of GI ulcers and bleeding, but as we all know starting with the worldwide withdrawal of rofecoxib in 2004, selective inhibition prostacyclin and prostaglandin pathways without the corresponding inhibition of thromboxane can lead to vasoconstriction, increased platelet adhesion, platelet aggregation, hypertension, and severe cardiovascular complications. The withdrawal of rofecoxib and valdecoxib, coupled with the refusal of the U.S. FDA to grant approval to etoricoxib and lumiracoxib in 2007, has largely stopped innovation in the development of traditional NSAIDs and shifted most analgesic drug discovery to other pathways that may be involved in pain and inflammation. The most recent FDA approvals for NSAIDs and acetaminophen related compounds have been formulations such as Duexis (ibuprofen + famotidine; 2011), Ofirmev (acetaminophen i.v.; 2010), Sprix (ketorolac tromethamine nasal; 2010), Vimovo (naproxen + esomeprazole; 2010), Zipsor (diclofenac potassium; 2009), Pennsaid (diclofenac topical solution; 2009), and Caldolor (ibuprofen injection). The i.v. and nasal formulations are approved only for short-term use, often in a hospital setting. However, this may not be the last story in the development of novel NSAID-related drugs for the treatment of chronic pain. For the past 6 years, I’ve had the opportunity to lead a clinical development 16 program for the development of CG100649, a novel and highly potent inhibitor of COX-1, COX-2, and human carbonic anhydrase I and II. Early Phase I studies showed that CG100649 bound reversibly with very high affinity to carbonic anhydrase enzymes in red blood cells and other tissues, using them as intracellular drug transporters. The vast majority of orally administered compound is quickly locked away within red blood cells and other tissues with very high molar concentrations of carbonic anhydrase, and protected from interactions with the gastrointestinal (GI) and cardiovascular systems. The typical PK profile in six consecutive clinical studies conducted to date has been that whole blood concentrations of CG100649 are 75-80x higher than plasma concentrations. Only purpose-made carbonic anhydrase inhibitors, such as methazolamide (12.5x whole blood to plasma ratio) come close to this type of stealth drug transport technology. In tissues where carbonic anhydrase levels are low or absent such as inflamed joints, CG100649 is free to dissociate from carbonic anhydrase, bind to COX-1 and COX-2, and inhibit production of prostaglandin E2, thromboxane, and related prostaglandins. Plasma levels of CG100649 tend to remain very low (mean of approximately 15-42 ng/mL after therapeutic-range doses of 1.2 to 2 mg/day) with comparatively little within-day or day-to-day variation due to replacement of plasma levels of drug from the much larger red blood cell reserves. In practice, this allows subjects to maintain therapeutic drug levels even if they miss 1-2 days of oral dosing. Data from a 21-day osteoarthritis Phase 2a efficacy trial showed that CG100649 significantly reduced the total WOMAC OA score (p=0.01) and WOMAC pain, stiffness, and physical function subscores (p<0.05) following an initial loading dose of 8 mg, followed by constant dosing at 1.2 mg/day (Schmidt et al., 2009). More recent data from a Phase 2b study confirmed that fixed dosing at 2 mg/day reduced the mean WOMAC pain score by 50% at the end of 28 days of daily dosing (Study CG100649-2-02; ClinicalTrials.gov identifier NCT01341405). There were no treatment-emergent adverse GI effects or cardiovascular effects that were higher in drug treatment groups than in the placebo group in either of these studies. A recent biomarker study (CG100649-1-04; ClinicalTrials.gov identifier NCT01154790) showed that CG100649 is a balanced COX-1 and COX-2 inhibitor at therapeutic and supra- MINERVA ANESTESIOLOGICA March 2013 ABSTRACT therapeutic doses in healthy volunteers. The data showed that ex vivo LPS-stimulated PGE2 was maximally inhibited (89-96%; p<0.001) by all 3 dose levels of CG100649 at Day 7. Serum TxB2 was reduced by 68-91% in all three active-drug cohorts (p<0.001). Urinary TxB-M was decreased by 33-67% in the two higher dose groups receiving 4 or 8 mg/day (p=0.012 and p=0.009, respectively). Urinary prostaglandin E metabolite (PGE-M) decreased 65-69% in all 3 dose cohorts (p≤0.001 on Day 7). Inhibition of PGE2 and TxB2 in this study compares favorably with traditional NSAIDs (ibuprofen, naproxen) and is uniquely different than COX-2 selective drugs such as celecoxib. PK analyses confirmed the unique preferential high-affinity binding of CG100649 to red blood cell carbonic anhydrase in all subjects; CG100649 concentrations were 50-70x higher in whole blood than in plasma in all 3 dose cohorts, in both males and females. CG100649 will enter Phase 3 clinical studies with extended dosing for up to 6 months in early 2013. We believe that the data may continue to show a favorable GI and cardiovascular profile in subjects with osteoarthritis pain through the reduction of exposure in sensitive tissues to the deleterious effects of NSAIDs while maintaining full therapeutic effects in inflamed and painful arthritic joints. History has shown that we have learned to avoid many of the life-threatening adverse effects of early NSAIDs that were first developed over 125 years ago. The challenge remains to develop effective and safe anti-inflammatory drugs that have reduced adverse gastrointestinal and cardiovascular effects that were first promised (but not delivered) with COX-2 selective compounds over a decade ago. References 1. Schmidt WK et al. Osteoarthritis Cartilage 2009;17(supplement 1):S173. Best practices in safe NSAID use in the elderly: a preview to the FDA safe use initiative – ACPP project Robert Taylor Jr., PhD Nema Research Inc., Naples, FL 34108, USA Background: Millions of people rely on both prescription and over-the-counter (OTC) medications to enhance their quality of life. Ho- Vol. 79 - Suppl. 1 to No. 3 wever, many people end up suffering from injury due to inappropriate use of medications. These injuries are preventable and their risk can be grouped into broad categories: medication errors, unintended exposures, and intentional drug misuse/abuse. Medication errors, unintended exposures and intentional drug misuse are a product of inadequate education and information for physicians and patients regarding the risks and optimal use of a drug. This lack of appropriate knowledge for both physician and patient may result in improper prescribing and patient use which can lead to preventable drug harm. Non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs) is a class of medications that functions best when both the physician and patient are aware of proper prescribing and use practices, however, when NSAIDs are not prescribed and/or used correctly serious injury can be the result. NSAIDs are effective as pain relievers and are available in both prescription and over-the-counter formulations. Their mechanism of action and toxicology are well understood. They are used quite frequently, especially in older adults (> 65 years old). Nevertheless, despite warnings and language about NSAIDs risks in the drug labels, the incidence of injury associated with them is high. Hundreds of thousands of people are hospitalized each year because of NSAID related complications with approximately > 16,500 deaths related to GI bleeding in the United States. Gastrointestinal (GI) complications including bleeding, peptic ulcers and bleeding of pre-existing ulcers may occur in up to 3% of all chronic NSAID users. NSAIDrelated renal function impairment may precipitate acute or chronic renal damage, and/or worsen cardiovascular conditions (e.g., hypertension and heart failure). Additional injuries that are associated with NSAIDs include atherosclerotic events such as myocardial infarction and stroke. With chronic NSAID use, patient cardiovascular risk can increase up to threefold. Other less common side effects include allergic reactions, drug-induced liver injury and CNS-effects (e.g., dizziness). As a result of natural physiological and other changes associated with aging, NSAID-related risks are more prevalent in older adults. Older adults are at a higher risk of multiple morbidities including GI complications, renal and hepatic impairment, and cardiovascular events. As MINERVA ANESTESIOLOGICA 17 ABSTRACT a result of these multiple morbidities, many older adults consume multiple medications. The addition of NSAIDs to their multi-drug regimen increases the risk of injuries as a result of drug-drug interactions which might differentially affect their various morbidities. NSAID-related injuries have been coined as the ‘silent epidemy’. Many physicians and patients are unaware of the growing number of injuries associated with improper NSAID use. Many health care providers and patients are unfamiliar with the risks associated with NSAIDs; and are either unaware or do not adhere to the prescribing and use guidelines. There are more than one set of guidelines, and physicians have admitted to being overwhelmed and confused by various guidelines and their lack of consistency. In addition patients may have the misconception that OTC drugs are by default safer than prescribed drugs. Failure to recognize such risks or follow the most current prescribing recommendations increases the risk of serious injury. In an effort to minimize the harm associated with inappropriate use of NSAIDs, the Food and Drug Administration’s Safe Use Initiative, the Association of Chronic Pain Patients (ACPP) and international key opinion leaders have come together to compile and disseminate a state of the art and clinically relevant information guide regarding NSAIDs, and the most up-to-date information on their safe and appropriate use with a focus on older adults. Many areas related to NSAIDs including mechanism of action, pharmacodynamics, pharmacokinetics, efficacy and safety in acute/chronic pain management and drugdrug interactions will be included. An emphasis will be made on practices from guidelines as well as physician experiences that have demonstrated significant effects on reducing the risk of injuries associated with inappropriate use of NSAIDs. The BEACON (The Best Practices of Safe NSAID Use) project was the outcome of the above mentioned collaboration. The BEACON project will provide a complete compilation of the most current and established guidelines/best practices for safe NSAID use. The ultimate goal of the project is to give both physicians and patients the tools necessary to increase awareness as well as promote the safe and appropriate use of these analgesics. Despite the risks associated with this class of medications, NSAIDs have become a mainstay and 18 valuable option for pain management in the older adult population, and promoting/ensuring appropriate and safe use of these medications is a must. Breakthrough pain: how to effectively treat. New old drugs with different pharmacokinetic approaches Christopher Gharibo, MD Department of Anesthesiology, NYU Langone-Hospital for Joint Diseases, NYU School of Medicine, New York, NY A majority of patients with acute and chronic pain experience breakthrough pain above their baseline, despite a fixed regimen. The characteristics of current short-acting oral medications are not optimal because they often peak too late and last beyond the duration of pain. Oral absorption limits the onset time, whereas the development of newer routes can shorten onset times. A number of medications, both opioid and nonopioid, are being developed for intranasal delivery with promising results. In addition to the intranasal administration route being efficacious, it also provides better patient satisfaction by allowing the patient to titrate their own pain medication. There are legitimate concerns for abuse and addiction with these medications, which will need to be minimized with proper dispensing modifica- tions. A number of nonopioid agents are also entering the market that will allow for multimechanistic analgesic plans. Although ketamine is not a common component of current pain treatment plans, the development of an intranasal formulation may potentially produce wider acceptance. Many traditional medications, including ibuprofen and acetaminophen, have been developed for parenteral administra- tion. Intravenous ibuprofen or diclofenac can be administered for a longer duration and have a lower bleeding risk then ketorolac. Intravenous acetaminophen can provide balanced analgesia when non- steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs are contraindicated, as is common in the postoperative period. The role of individual agents in each specialty is not currently clear, but the future treatment of pain, both acute and chronic, is brighter with the addition of these formulations. MINERVA ANESTESIOLOGICA March 2013 ABSTRACT Localized neuropathic pain and transdermal therapeutical approach Ralf Baron Division of Neurological Pain Research and Therapy, Department of Neurology, Christian-Albrechts-Universität Kiel, Kiel, Germany Chronic neuropathic pain is common in clinical practice, is a major economical health problem and greatly impairs the quality of life of patients. Estimates of point prevalence for neuropathic pain in the general population are as high as 5%, a quarter of them suffering from severe intensity. Rational for topical treament Animal work demonstrated that nerve injury is matched by an increased expression of messenger RNA for voltage gated sodium channels in primary afferent neurons (e.g., Nav1.3, Nav1.8, Nav1.9) leading to an increased electrical excitability and spontaneous activity. There is increasing evidence that also uninjured fibers running in a partially lesioned nerve may express sodium channels and thus take part in pain signaling. Furthermore, a nerve injury induces a modulation of the transient receptor potential V1 (TRPV1). The TRPV1 is located on subtypes of peripheral nociceptive endings and is physiologically activated by noxious heat at about 41°C. After nerve lesion TRPV1 is down-regulated on injured nerve fibers, but upregulated on uninjured C-fibers. Such a novel expression of TRPV1 and additional sensitization to heat by intracellular signal transduction may lead to spontaneous nerve activity induced by normal body temperature, if threshold of TRPV1 were reduced below 38°C. The modern concepts of pain generation in neuropathies focus on these pathological processes of sensitization, i.e. hyperexcitability of primary afferent neurons, with the consequence of secondary central sensitization. Clinically many patients suffer from spontaneous pain that is perceived in the affected skin and cutaneous hypersensibility, i.e. mechanical and thermal allodynia. These symptoms are summarized under the umbrella term localized neuropathic pain. Localized neuropathic pain is suggested to be defined as “a type of peripheral neuropathic pain that is characterized by consistent and circumscribed area(s) of maximum pain associated with abnormal sensitivity of the skin and/or spontaneous symptoms characteristic of neuropathic pain, for example, burning pain”. Since patients with localized neuropathic Vol. 79 - Suppl. 1 to No. 3 symptoms likely have hyperexcitable afferents in their affected skin this patient group is ideal for the use of topical medication: Topical lidocaine Topical lidocaine directly targets the sodium channels of sensitized afferents in the affected skin. Despite this direct and effective peripheral action there is no systemic absorption of the lidocaine which is reflected by a superior tolerability of the treatment. Beside the pharmacological effect on afferent neurons lidocaine patches have a protective component that deprives the skin from mechanical and thermal stimuli. There is evidence from randomized controlled studies in patients with neuropathic pain demonstrating efficacy of topical lidocaine patches. A meta-analysis of three studies including patients with PHN and brush induced allodynia showed greater pain relief from 5% lidocaine plaster on the painful area compared to a vehicle although the therapeutic gain was modest (Khaliq et al 2007). Two other studies confirmed this efficacy: one used an enrichment enrolment design with a primary outcome measure time-toexit (Galer et al 1999) and the other (Wasner et al 2005) was extracted from a study of multi-aetiology neuropathic pain (Meier et al 2003). A subsequent trial using an enriched-enrolment design failed to show a difference between lidocaine and placebo on the primary outcome measure (timeto-exit) but most secondary outcome measures favoured lidocaine. However the groups were not balanced at baseline and many patients withdrew prematurely from the study (Binder et al 2009). In an enriched-design non-inferiority open label trial lidocaine plaster had a more favourable side effect profile and seemed of similar efficacy as pregabalin (Baron et al 2009). Because of the topical mode of action lidocaine patches have a favorable side effect profile and are well tolerated even in the long-term administration (up to 2 years). Furthermore, since there are no pharmacokinetic interactions an add-on therapy to all available systemic drugs is possible and has additional efficacy. Topical capsaicin Patients who are characterized by an up-regulation of TRPV1 receptors might be ideal for the use of topically applied capsaicin: Topical capsaicin directly targets TRPV1 receptors of sensitized afferents in the affected skin, thus desensitizing the hyperactive neurons and reducing pain. Sin- MINERVA ANESTESIOLOGICA 19 ABSTRACT ce there are no pharmacokinetic interactions an add-on therapy to all available systemic drugs is possible. A high concentration capsaicin formulation is now available. In clinical trials of postherpetic neuralgia and painful HIV-neuropathy one application of this 8% capsaicin patch induced pain reduction for about 12 weeks. Based on these trial results the currently available treatment recommendations include lidocaine and capsaicin patches for the treatment of localized neuropathic pain syndromes as monotherapy or in combination with systemic treatment. References 1. Khaliq W, Alam S, Puri N. Topical lidocaine for the treatment of postherpetic neuralgia. Cochrane Database Syst Rev. 2007 Apr 18;(2):CD004846 2. Galer BS, Rowbotham MC, Perander J, Friedman E. Topical lidocaine patch relieves postherpetic neuralgia more effectively than a vehicle topical patch: results of an enriched enrollment study. Pain 1999 April;80(3):533-8 3. Wasner G, Kleinert A, Binder A, Schattschneider J, Baron R. Postherpetic neuralgia: topical lidocaine is effective in nociceptor-deprived skin. J. Neurol. 2005 Jun;252(6):677-86 4. Meier T, Wasner G, Faust M, Kuntzer T, Ochsner F, Hueppe M, Bogousslavsky J, Baron R. Efficacy of lidocaine patch 5% in the treatment of focal peripheral neuropathic pain syndromes: a randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled study. Pain 2003 Nov;106(1-2):151-8 5. Binder A, Bruxelle J, Rogers P, Hans G, Bösl I, Baron R. Topical 5% lidocaine (lignocaine) medicated plaster treatment for post-herpetic neuralgia: results of a double-blind, placebo-controlled, multinational efficacy and safety trial. Clin Drug Investig. 2009;29(6):393-408 6. Baron R, Mayoral V, Leijon G, Binder A, Steigerwald I, Serpell M. 5% lidocaine medicated plaster versus pregabalin in post-herpetic neuralgia and diabetic polyneuropathy: an open-label, non-inferiority two-stage RCT study. Curr Med Res Opin. 2009 Jul;25(7):1663-76 Practical overview of interventional pain management techniques: “What the everyday interventionist needs to know.” Alan B Hurschman Plaza Medical Center Fort Worth Texas and Health South. Rehabilitation Hospital Fort Worth, Texas, USA. We are standing on the shoulders of great researchers, professors, doctors and scientist in the field of medicine. I personally have not participated in any research projects. The information that I provide is regrettably only from my personal experience as a clinician. What I have observed, monitored. and written in progress and procedure notes are what I base my medical 20 opinion on. Unfortunately double blind studies are difficult to carry out in our field of interventional pain medicine due to the concern for the patient as well as the risk. It would be hard to find a patient in pain that would agree to be part of the control group and receive normal saline at the spine or peripheral nerves since every patient with chronic pain demands relief of the suffering yesterday. I applaud the research of Dr. Lax Manchikanti who has set up guidelines for “evidence based medicine.” This is a buzz word in the American medical community especially in the insurance company and political arenas. At the same time American politics as in European politics are demanding cost saving measures from the medical community without sacrificing “quality care”, another buzz word. What I propose is a cost saving procedural measure that may be controversial. I have gone through medical literature in the physical medicine and rehabilitation and anesthesiology sub-specialties of pain medicine. I have found a paucity of research on performing most spinal interventional procedures with just local anesthesia. In view of that fact, I have not done any research on local anesthesia spinal procedures I can provide some guidelines on performing procedures under local anesthesia. My abstract will provide case studies. Hopefully, this will stimulate researchers to explore the concept of performing interventions without using conscious sedation or general anesthesia routinely. Radiofrequency in interventional pain management: what is the evidence? Honorio T. Benzon, MD Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine, Chicago Illinois. USA Radiofrequency (RF) treatments include thermal, water-cooled, or pulsed RF. The role of thermal RF has been established while evidence for the efficacy of pulsed RF is still lacking. Thermal RF involves heating the tip of the needle to 80 degrees centigrade for 90 seconds while in pulsed RF, a temperature of 42 degrees centigrade is applied for 120 seconds. The lesions caused by water-cooled RF are bigger than the thermal RF. Prognostic/ diagnostic blocks should be done before radiofrequency is performed. MINERVA ANESTESIOLOGICA March 2013 ABSTRACT Thermal radiofrequency Head and face pain Studies on thermal RF for trigeminal neuralgia are mostly retrospective in nature. The effectiveness of the procedure however is accepted based on extensive experience. Kanpolat et al reviewed their 25-year experience on 1600 patients and noted acute pain relief in 98% of patients, complete pain relief at 5 years in 58% of patients, and pain relief in 100% of patients who had multiple procedures at their 20-year follow-up.1 Complications included diminished corneal reflex, masseter weakness and paralysis, dysesthesia, anesthesia dolorosa, keratitis, and transient/permanent paralysis of cranial nerves III and VI, CSF leak, carotid-cavernous fistula in one, and aseptic meningitis. Spine pain A randomized double-blind sham-controlled study showed the efficacy of thermal RF in patients with cervical facet joint pain after whiplash injury. The median time before the pain returned to 50% of baseline was 263 days in the RF group compared to 8 days in the control group.2 The effectiveness of thermal RF in facet-mediated was confirmed in several reviews.3-6 For the treatment of cervicogenic headache, a prospective study showed thermal RF to reduce the headache severity, number of headache days per week, and analgesic intake per week.7 A randomized study showed thermal RF to have better short-term (3 months) efficacy than a sham procedure but long-term relief was not noted.8 A pilot study showed the procedure to be no more effective than an occipital nerve block.9 For cervical radicular pain, a prospective study showed that RF of the dorsal root ganglion (DRG) with the needle tip heated to 67 degrees C resulted in relief in 75% of patients at 3 months and in 50% of patients at 6 months.10 No sign of motor denervation or deafferentation was noted. However, there was tendency for the pain to recur 3-9 months after treatment. In a double-blind randomized study, RF-DRG at 67 degrees C resulted in significantly better results than a sham procedure.11 Another double-blind study noted equal efficacy between RF-DRG at 67 degrees and at 40 degrees C.12 Reviews however showed limited efficacy of RF-DRG in cervical radicular pain.3, 5 Studies on thermal RF of the thoracic medial branches for facet-mediated pain were prospective series, without a control group.13, 14 Both studies showed some benefit. One of the studies showed no difference in results in the cervical-, thoracic-, Vol. 79 - Suppl. 1 to No. 3 and lumbar- facet mediated pain (14). For thoracic radicular pain, retrospective studies showed thermal RF-DRG at 67 degrees C, to result in shortterm relief. One study showed complete relief in 67% of the patients and greater than 50% relief in another 24% at 2months with excellent long-term (13-46 months follow up) results in 49% of the patients.15 The other study showed significantly better short-term and long-term pain relief in patients with clearly localized pain confined to one or two segmental levels.16 Several randomized, controlled studies showed the efficacy of thermal RF in lumbar facet-mediated pain.17-19 The relief lasted 6 to 12 months. Other studies showed lack of superiority of thermal RF but there were problems in the methodologies used: high percentage of screened patients as fitting the criteria of facet pain and questionable positive diagnostic response, i.e. > 24 hour relief after lidocaine.20 The other study showed no superiority of RF in terms of pain scores and medication usage but did show a greater percentage of patients with > 50% reduction in complaints.21 Two randomized studies comparing thermal and pulsed RF showed better results with thermal RF.22, 23 Studies on RFDRG are mostly retrospective. A prospective study on RF-DRG at 70-80 degrees for 120 seconds in 26 patients with low back and neck pain showed beneficial results in 10.24 A retrospective study showed an initial success rate of 60% with a mean duration of pain reduction of 3.7 years.25 However, a randomized double-blind study showed the effects of RF-DRG (67 degrees for 90 seconds) and sham treatment were similar.26 Water-cooled radiofrequency A placebo-controlled study on water-cooled RF of the L4-5 primary dorsal rami and S1-3 lateral branches for sacroiliac joint pain showed better results of the water-cooled RF.27 The small number of patients calls for a larger trial. Pulsed radiofrequency Head, face, and spine pain The evidence for pulsed RF of the trigeminal ganglion is weak, a randomized study showed it not to be effective (28). The evidence of pulsed RF of the sphenopalatine ganglion for chronic head and face pain is also weak, based mostly on case reports or case series.29 A randomized controlled trial showed PRF-DRG was more effective than placebo in patients with cervical radicular pain.30 The difference was statistically significant at 3 months, MINERVA ANESTESIOLOGICA 21 ABSTRACT but not at 6 months, and analgesic requirements were less. Complications Complications from pulsed RF are minor. Complications from thermal RF include post-procedure burning pain that lasts 1-3 weeks, hematoma and bruising, infection, spinal cord trauma, and pneumothorax. Conclusions Pulsed RF-DRG should be used in cervical radicular pain since it appears to be as effective and is safe. The evidence of efficacy for thoracic RF-DRG is low. Thermal RF for lumbar facetmediated pain results in acceptable pain relief for 6-12 months. The role of lumbar RF-DRG has not been established. Initial results show watercooled RF to be effective in relieving sacroiliac joint pain. References 1. Kanpolat Y, Savas A, Bekar A, Berk C. Percutaneous controlled radiofrequency trigeminal rhizotomy for the treatment of idiopathic trigeminal neuralgia: 25-year experience with 1,600 patients. Neurosurgery 2001;48:524-32. 2. Lord SM, Barnsley L, Wallis BJ, McDonald GJ, Bogduk N. Percutaneous radio-frequency neurotomy for chronic cervical zygapophyseal-joint pain. N Engl J Med 1996;335: 1721-6. 3. Geurts JW, van Wijk RM, Stolker RJ, Groen GJ. Efficacy of radiofrequency procedures for the treatment of spinal pain: a systematic review of randomized clinical trials. Reg Anesth Pain Med 2001;26:394-400. 4. Manchikanti L, Singh V, Vilims BD et al. Medial branch neurotomy in management of chronic spinal pain: systematic review of the evidence. Pain Physician 2002;5:405-18. 5. Niemisto L, Kalso E, Malmivaara A, et al. Radiofrequency denervation for neck and back pain: a systematic review within the framework of the cochrane collaboration back review group. Spine 2003;28:1877-88. 6. Boswell MV, Trescot AM, Datta S et al. American Society of Interventional Pain P: Interventional techniques: evidence-based practice guidelines in the management of chronic spinal pain. Pain Physician 2007;10:7-111. 7. van Suijlekom JA, van Kleef M, Barendse G, et al. Radiofrequency cervical zygapophyeal joint neurotomy for cervicogenic headache. A prospective study in 15 patients. Functional neurology 1998;13:297-303. 8. Stovner LJ, Kolstad F, Helde G. Radiofrequency denervation of facet joints C2-C6 in cervicogenic headache: a randomized, double-blind, sham-controlled study. Cephalalgia 2004;24:821-30. 9. Haspeslagh SR, Van Suijlekom HA, et al. Randomised controlled trial of cervical radiofrequency lesions as a treatment for cervicogenic headache [ISRCTN07444684]. BMC Anesthesiol 2006;16:1. 10. van Kleef M, Spaans F, Dingemans W et al. Effects and side effects of a percutaneous thermal lesion of the dorsal root ganglion in patients with cervical pain syndrome. Pain 1993;52:49-53. 11. van Kleef M, Liem L, Lousberg R et al. Radiofrequency lesion adjacent to the dorsal root ganglion for cervicobra- 22 chial pain: a prospective double blind randomized study. Neurosurgery 1996;38:1127-31. 12. Slappendel R, Crul BJ, Braak GJ et al. The efficacy of radiofrequency lesioning of the cervical spinal dorsal root ganglion in a double blinded randomized study: no difference between 40 degrees C and 67 degrees C treatments. Pain 1997;73:159-63. 13. Stolker RJ, Vervest AC, Groen GJ. Percutaneous facet denervation in chronic thoracic spinal pain. Acta Neurochir (Wien) 1993;122:82-90. 14. Tzaan WC, Tasker RR. Percutaeous radiofrequency facet rhizotomy--experience with 118 procdedures and reappraisal of its value. Can J Neurol Sci 2000;27:125-30. 15. Stolker RJ, Vervest AC, Groen GJ. The treatment of chronic thoracic segmental pain by radiofrequency percutaneous partial rhizotomy. J Neurosurg 1994;80:986-92. 16. van Kleef M, Spaans F. The effects of producing a radiofrequency lesion adjacent to the dorsal root ganglion in patients with thoracic segmental pain by radiofrequency percutanious partial rhizotomy. Clin J Pain 1995;11:32532. 17. Gallagher J, Vadi PLP, Wesley JR. Radiofrequency facet joint denervation in the treatment of low back pain-a prospective controlled double-blind study in assess to efficacy. Pain Clinic 1994;7:193-8. 18. van Kleef M, Barendse GA, Kessels A et al. Randomized trial of radiofrequency lumbar facet denervation for chronic low back pain. Spine 1999;24:1937-42. 19. Nath S, Nath CA, Pettersson K. Percutaneous lumbar zygapophysial (Facet) joint neurotomy using radiofrequency current, in the management of chronic low back pain: a randomized double-blind trial. Spine 2008;33:1291-7; discussion 1298. 20. Leclaire R, Fortin L, Lambert R et al. Radiofrequency facet joint denervation in the treatment of low back pain: a placebo-controlled clinical trial to assess efficacy. Spine 2001; 26:1411-6; discussion 1417. 21. van Wijk RM, Geurts JW et al. Radiofrequency denervation of lumbar facet joints in the treatment of chronic low back pain: a randomized, double-blind, sham lesioncontrolled trial. Clin J Pain 2005;21:335-44. 22. Tekin I, Mirzai H, Ok G, Erbuyun K, Vatansever. A comparison of conventional and pulsed radiofrequency denervation in the treatment of chronic facet joint pain. Clin J Pain 2007;23:524-9. 23. Kroll HR, Kim D, Danic MJ et al. A randomized, doubleblind, prospective study comparing the efficacy of continuous versus pulsed radiofrequency in the treatment of lumbar facet syndrome. J Clin Anesth 2008;20:534-7. 24. Nash TP. Percutaneous radiofrequency lesioning of dorsal root ganglia for intractable pain. Pain 1986;24:67-73. 25. van Wijk RM, Geurts JW, Wynne HJ. Long-lasting analgesic effect of radiofrequency treatment of the lumbosacral dorsal root ganglion. J Neurosurg 2001;94:227-31. 26. Geurts JW, van Wijk RM, Wynne HJ, Hammink E, Buskens E, Lousberg R, Knape JT, Groen GJ. Radiofrequency lesioning of dorsal root ganglia for chronic lumbosacral radicular pain: a randomised, double-blind, controlled trial. Lancet 2003;361:21-6. 27. Cohen SP, Hurley RW, Buckenmaier CC, et al. Randomized placebo-controlled study evaluating lateral branch radiofrequency denervation for sacroiliac joint pain. Anesthesiology 2008;109:279-88. 28. Erdine S, Ozyalcin NS, Cimen A, Celik M, Talu GK, Disci R. Comparison of pulsed radiofrequency with conventional radiofrequency in the treatment of idiopathic trigeminal neuralgia. Eur J Pain 2007;11:309-13. 29. Bayer E, Racz GB, Miles D, Heavner J. Sphenopalatine ganglion pulsed radiofrequency treatment in 30 patients MINERVA ANESTESIOLOGICA March 2013 ABSTRACT suffering from chronic face and head pain. Pain Practice 2005;5:223-7. 30. Van Zundert J, Patijn J, Kessels A, et al. Pulsed radiofrequency adjacent to the cervical dorsal root ganglion in chronic cervical radicular pain: a double blind sham controlled randomized clinical trial. Pain 2007;127:173-82. Pharmacological enhancement of spinal stimulation for pain. A new strategy Bengt Linderoth Dept. Clin. Neuroscience, Karolinska Institutet and Dept. Neurosurgery, Karolinska University Hospital, Stockholm, Sweden Background A troublesome observation with SCS therapy in patients with neuropathic pain is that between 30-50% experience an insufficient effect initially or after some year of stimulation. Up to recently there has been no rational remedy for this problem. Only during the two last decades have experimental studies of SCS in animals provided some knowledge about the pivotal neurochemical mechanisms forming a basis for clinical trials with “drug-enhanced SCS” when SCS per se has proven insufficient. Experimental basis In a series of experiments with nerve lesioned rats it was demonstrated that SCS reduces the release of excitatory amino acids (e.g. glutamate) in the dorsal horn and at the same time augments the GABA release, but only in rats that in preceding behavioural experiments had been found to respond to SCS. These findings were supplemented by behavioral experiments where it was shown that i.t. administration of GABA or the GABAB agonist, baclofen, markedly enhanced the effect of SCS. In subsequent studies it was found that rats that were non-responders to SCS, could be converted to responders with intrathecal administration of low, by themselves ineffective, doses of baclofen. Later studies also demonstrated that gabapentin, pregabalin and clonidine may have similar potentiating effects in non-responding rats. In particular, the results obtained with clonidine are of interest since it is known that the antinociceptive effect of this substance is related to activation of the spinal cholinergic system. A further study showed that the release of acetylcholine (Ach) in the dorsal horn was augmented in rats responding Vol. 79 - Suppl. 1 to No. 3 to SCS during stimulation while the Ach levels in the non-responders were unchanged. Further studies using Ach receptor antagonists administered intrathecally indicated the pivotal importance of the muscarinic M4 and M2 receptors for the SCS effect. When combining SCS with a subeffective dose of oxotremorine (a muscarinic agonist) the suppressive effect of SCS on the pain related symptoms was dramatically enhanced in rats failing to obtain a satisfactory effect with SCS alone. Since some antidepressants are also used for treatment of neuropathic pain we studied interactions between three antidepressants and SCS. Subeffective doses were given intrathecally together with SCS in non-responding animals. Three drugs were tested: a tricyclic antidepressant (amitriptyline), a selective serotonin reuptake inhibitor, (fluoxetine) and a selective serotonin/noradrenalin reuptake inhibitor, (milnacipran). This study showed that both amitriptyline and milnacipran produced a significant enhancement of the SCS effect. In a recent study ketamine (a NMDA receptor antagonist) was used with a similar strategy to convert rats not responding to SCS therapy after a partial sciatic nerve lesion to SCS responders using individually determined subeffective doses of the i.t. drug. The aim here was to depress the glutamine-induced central sensitization partly with the drug and additionally with SCS. The combined treatment of non-responders to SCS resulted in a significant reduction of the withdrawal thresholds thereby converting them into responders. Clinical studies: On the basis of such animal studies as those reviewed above clinical trials were initiated where it was demonstrated that the SCS effect can be effectively enhanced/restored by the simultaneously administration of intrathecal baclofen, and later also clonidine, in low doses. In the first study baclofen was first injected as i. t. boluses in doses ranging from 25-100 micrograms. It appears that maximally 20-25% of the bolus tested patients responded so well that a pump implantation was warranted. In animals it proved possible to actually convert a complete non-responder into an SCS responding rat but for humans it seemed to be a requirement that a small, modest effect existed before the drug trial. Follow-up studies were performed during 2005 and 2006 where all patients treated with either SCS enhanced by baclofen, or by i.t. baclofen only were reviewed. MINERVA ANESTESIOLOGICA 23 ABSTRACT Of the implanted 11 patients two were lost due to technical failures, but the remaining nine were examined with an average follow-up period of 73 months. At the follow-up these still enjoyed the same pain-relief as initially (decrease from VAS 76 pre-implant via an average of VAS 33 at an earlier follow-up (2003-2004) , to the late FU; average 40). During the study period there was an average dose increase of 30 %. This study demonstrates that a deficient SCS effect in neuropathic pain, in selected patients, may be considerably improved by intrathecal baclofen administration and that this enhanced effect persists for a long time. Other SCS + drug trials. In a more recent study patients with neuropathic pain syndromes demonstrating insufficiant pain relief with SCS alone in spite of good paresthesia coverage were enrolled in randomized i.t. trials with blinded bolus injections of clonidine, baclofen and saline. Ten cases were enrolled and seven out of these demonstrated a significant enhancement of the SCS effect with the addition of the drug. Four of the patients were successfully implanted with a pump for combined therapy with SCS; two with clonidine and two with baclofen therapy. In cases of mixed pain components (neuropathic/ nociceptive pain) e.g. in FBSS (failed back surgery syndrome), of course the SCS effect could be supported by common analgesics e.g. opioids. Treatment with combined SCS and spinal opioid infusion is performed in some centers and an analysis of a number of cases has been published. Conclusions The use of SCS therapy will probably increase in the future and thereby also the number of cases with insufficient benefits from the stimulation per se. The above examples of strategies to enhance the effects of SCS should be considered as only examples since possibly many new mechanisms will be detected in the near future leading us to new agonistic – or even antagonistic pharmaceuticals to examine. Thus, what we see here is only the beginning of drug-enhanced spinal stimulation. References 1. Virtually all basic and clinical studies referred to above can be found in the two articles below. 2. Linderoth B, Foreman RD. Pain Medicine 2006;7(Suppl. 1):14-26. 3. Lind G, Linderoth B. Pain Management. 2011;1(5):441449, Future Medicine. 2011. 24 Regional anesthesia: why must I choose it? Marc A. Huntoon, M.D. Professor of Anesthesiology, Vanderbilt University, Nashville TN, USA. Introduction One of the enduring goals of many who perform regional anesthesia techniques has been to show an added value to the service. Proponents of regional anesthesia believe that the techniques are able to improve postoperative pain control, reduce supplementary analgesic use, improve side effects such as respiratory depression, cardiac ischemia, pulmonary embolic events, wound infections, reduce surgical stress, and potentially lead to reduced lengths of stay in the hospital, enhanced functional recovery times, and ultimately, produce significant health care cost savings. In the more recent past, there have been multiple articles that suggest that there may effects of regional anesthesia and local anesthetics on cancer survival. Well- designed trials of many of these concepts are still lacking, and several meta-analyses and reviews have been inconsistent in this regard. Perioperative Outcomes: Length of Stay, Rehabilitation, and Chronic Persistent Pain At the Mayo Clinic, implementation of an analgesic pathway that emphasized peripheral nerve blocks ( lumbar plexus continuous catheter infusions for total hip arthroplasty patients and femoral nerve catheter infusions coupled with single injection sciatic nerve blocks for total knee arthroplasty patients were most commonly utilized. Many patients also received subarachnoid anesthesia or light general anesthetics for the primary anesthesia technique. All patients received acetaminophen supplementation, oral opioids, and NSAIDs (ketorolac 15 mg every 6 hours times 4 doses maximum). One hundred patients were studied and compared to 100 matched controls receiving traditional anesthetics. The primary outcome variable studied was length of hospital stay, with secondary outcomes including time to ambulation, discharge eligibility, and joint range of motion. Numerical ratings of pain, opioid requirements, and perioperative complications were also recorded. The authors demonstrated a shorter length of stay in patients treated with the CPNB analgesic pathway( 3.8 versus 5 days; p<.001) and also had sooner discharge eligibility and greater joint range of motion.1 Earlier, Capdevila and colleagues 2 studied 56 patients sep- MINERVA ANESTESIOLOGICA March 2013 ABSTRACT arated into 3 groups to examine whether rehabilitation treatment goals were impacted by regional techniques. They showed that implementation of either epidural continuous infusions or continuous femoral nerve blocks were associated with shorter stays in rehabilitation after total knee arthroplasty, and patients tolerated continuous passive motion (CPM) with better analgesia than those patients that received IV-PCA. The authors concluded that the CPNB and epidural groups both decreased the rehabilitation convalescence time by allowing better early CPM, but that there were more complications in the epidural group. Many researchers have sought to show that implementation of regional anesthetic techniques resulted in other long-term tangible benefits. An interesting series of studies by Ilfeld and colleagues looked at the comparison of short term (24 hour) versus 4 day CPNBs to see if there were any long term benefits manifested by increasing the time of infusion.3 The investigators concluded that simply extending the infusion to 4 days did not result in any additional improvement or worsening of pain, stiffness or functional disability. Perkins and Kehlet outlined the problem of chronic persistent pain after many types of surgery more than one decade ago.4 The realization that surgery can lead to chronic pain has galvanized anesthesiologists to find responsible solutions during the perioperative period that can change these outcomes. Multiple pian syndromes such as post-thoracotomy pain, post -mastectomy pain, post -herniorraphy pain, and post-amputation phantom /stump pain continue to occur in large numbers. There are few studies that demonstrate long term improvement or “preemptive analgesic” effects from a regional technique in isolation. One study of patients who were prospectively treated with thoracic epidural initiated either preoperatively, postoperatively or receiving only IV-PCA was performed.5 The authors later surveyed the patients at 6 months, and those patients who had received preoperative initiation of their bupivacaine and morphine epidurals had decreased long-term pain compared to those who had received only IVPCA. Most studies have applied a multimodal approach, however. For example, Buvanendran and colleagues applied a large dose of pregabalin (300 mg) prior to surgery and continued the drug during a 15 day period after surgery with a terminal phase tapering dose. All patients in their study had regional anesthesia (combined spinal-epidural infusions). They were able to demonstrate a reduc- Vol. 79 - Suppl. 1 to No. 3 tion in the incidence of chronic persistent pain at 6 months (0% versus 5.2% inn the placebo group; p=0.014) they also noted less analgesic use, and sooner range of motion targets for knee flexion.6 Analgesia One large trial that evaluated the effectiveness and safety of a large number of patients in Germany (18,925) over a period from 1998-2006 included 14,223 patients that received patient-controlled epidural analgesia (PCEA), 3001 brachial plexus or femoral/sciatic continuous peripheral nerve blocks (CPNBs), and 1591 intravenous patient –controlled analgesia infusions (IV-PCAs). The authors analyzed this prospectively- collected data, and were able to demonstrate that PCEA and CPNB provided superior pain relief compared to IV-PCA with an overall low rate of complications.7 A meta-analysis of 19 trials enrolling over 600 patients found that the analgesia from CPNBs was superior to that from opioids across all times (p<0.001).8 Though the data for the perioperative period producing good analgesia is clear, there are potential drawbacks to these CPNB techniques. One of the potential shortcomings of performing continuous blocks of peripheral nerves is the potential for muscular weakness that might manifest as a fall. Ilfeld and colleagues showed that this is a real phenomenon that must be considered when utilizing this type of treatment.9 Cancer Recurrence One of the first studies to examine the effects of local anesthetics and regional anesthesia on cancer recurrence was performed by Exadaktylos and colleagues.10 The authors retrospectively examined the records of 129 patients who had received either paravertebral anesthesia/analgesia combined with general anesthesia, versus patients who received analgesia via morphine intravenously. The group treated with paravertebral blocks had better (less) recurrence and metastasis free survival 94% versus 77% at 36 months (p=0.012) despite similar tumor and surgical factors. A more recently published retrospective trial examined the effects of intraoperative use of epidural infusions compared to patient who either received only post-operative epidural infusions, or intravenous opioids. The group that received intraoperative epidural infusions had a mean time to ovarian cancer recurrence of 73 months, versus 33 or 38 months in the postoperative epidural and no-epidural groups. The authors concluded that the recurrence was delayed MINERVA ANESTESIOLOGICA 25 ABSTRACT due to preservation of immune function.11 An even larger population based study utilized a database of 42,151 patients who either did or did not receive epidurals at the time of surgery for non-metastatic colon cancer. They found cancer recurrence rates were significantly less in the epidural group after at least 4 year follow-up.12 Conclusions Regional anesthesia use for multiple surgeries can be associated with improved analgesia, faster attainment of rehabilitation goals, and shorter lengths of hospital stay. Primary regional anesthesia by itself may not provide for decreased incidence of chronic pain, but may be improved by a multimodal analgesic strategy. Prevention of cancer recurrences is a fascinating new area of inquiry that holds great promise. References 1. Hebl JR, Dilger JA, Byer DE, Kopp SL, Stevens SR, Pagnano MW, Hanssen AD, Horlocker TT. A Pre-emptive multimodal pathway featuring peripheral nerve blockade improves perioperative outcomes after major orthopedic surgery. Reg Anesth Pain Med 2008;33:510-7. 2. Capdevila X, Barthelet Y, Biboulet P, Rickwaert Y, Rubinovitch J, d’Athis F. Effects of perioperative analgesic technique on the surgical outcome and duration of rehabilitation after major knee surgery. Anesthesiology 1999;91:8-15. 3. Ilfeld BM, Shuster JJ, Theriaque DW, Mariano ER, Girard PJ, Loland VJ, Meyer RS, Donovan JF, Pugh GA, Le LT, Sessler DI, Ball ST. Long -term pain, stiffness, and functional disability after total knee arthroplasty, with and without an extended ambulatory continuous femoral nerve block: A prospective 1-year follow- up of a multicenter, randomized, triple-masked placebo-controlled trial. Reg Anesth Pain Med 2011;36:116-20. 4. Perkins FM, Kehlet H. Chronic pain as an outcome of surgery: A review of predictive factors. Anesthesiology 2000;93:1123-33. 5. Senturk M, Ozcan PE, Talu GK et al. The effects of three different analgesia techniques on long-term post-thoracotomy pain. Anesth Analg. 2002;94:11-5. 6. Buvanendran A, Kroin JS, Della Valle CJ, Kari M, Moric M, Tuman KJ. Perioperative oral pregabalin reduces chronic pain after total knee arthroplasty: a prospective randomized controlled trial. Anesth Analg 2010;110:199207. 7. Pöpping DM, Zahn PK, Van Aken HK,Dasch R, Boche R, Pogatski-Zahn EM. Effectiveness and safety of postoperative pain management: a survey of 18925 consecutive patients between 1998 and 2006 (2nd revision): a database analysis of prospectively raised data. British J Anaesthesia 2008;6:832-40. 8. Richman JM, Liu SS, Courpas G, Wong R, Rowlingson AJ, McGready J, Cohen SR, Wu CL. Does continuous peripheral nerve block provide superior pain control to opioids? A meta-analysis. Anesth Analg 2006;102:248-57. 9. Ilfeld BM, Duke KB, Donahue MC. The association between lower extremity continuous peripheral nerve blocks and patient falls after knee and hip arthroplasty. Anesth Analg 2010; 111:1552-4. 26 10. Exadaktylos AK, Buggy DJ, Moriarty DC, Mascha E, Sessler DI. Can anesthetic technique for primary breast cancer surgery affect recurrence or metastasis?Anesthesiology 2006;105:660-4. 11. de Oliveira Jr GS, Ahmad S, Schink JC, Singh DK, Fitzgerald PC, McCarthy RJ. Intraoperative neuraxial anesthesia but not postoperative neuraxial analgesia is associated with increased relapse-free survival in ovarian cancer patients after primary cytoreductive surgery. Reg Anesth Pain Med 2011;36:271-7. 12. Cummings KC, Xu F, Cummings LC, Cooper GS. A comparison of epidural analgesia and traditional pain management effects on survival and cancer recurrences after colectomy. A population-based study. Anesthesiology 2012;116:797-806. The effects of regional anesthesia-analgesia on the immune system María F. Ramirez MD* and Juan P. Cata MD* *Department of Anesthesiology and Perioperative Medicine The University of Texas -‐ MD Anderson Cancer Center. Houston, Texas. USA The immune system involves a complex network of cells and soluble mediators. Among the former, we Kind macrophages, antigen presenting cells (APCs) and lymphocytes. Interleukins (IL), prostaglandins (PGs), chemokines (CX) and growth factors are the soluble mediators that not only modulate the function of those cells but also have speciKic actions on foreign pathogens such as virus and cancer cells. The immune system can be positively or negatively modulated through a variety of non-‐pharmacological and pharmacological interventions. Surgery itself is able to trigger immune suppression. The activation of the sympathetic system that is associated to surgery is perhaps one of the driving mechanisms behind the surgery-‐induced immune suppression. (Cata, Gottumukkala et al. 2012) This phenomenon is characterized by a decrease in the function of an important subset of lymphocytes, the natural killer (NK) cells that play a key role in the innate immune response. SpeciKically, NK cells cause virus or cancer cell death through direct cytotoxic contact. Most surgical procedures, even minimally invasive, are performed under either general anesthesia, regional anesthesia or their combination. Anesthetics and analgesics used for general anesthesia have strong action on the immune. For instance, opioids and volatile anesthetics are known to depress the function NK cells, T cells and APCs.(Beagles, Wellstein et al. 2004; Sacerdote 2006) Ketamine MINERVA ANESTESIOLOGICA March 2013 ABSTRACT another widely used anesthetic also depress the function of NK cells, in contrast propofol appears to preserve the function of NK cells and other lymphocytes.(Melamed, Bar-‐Yosef et al. 2003) Thus, regional anesthesia represents an interesting alternative to modulate the immune system because it might ameliorate the stress response associated to surgery and reduce or eliminate the need of immune suppressive anesthetics and analgesics.(Cata, Gottumukkala et al. 2012) The beneKicial effects of regional anesthesia on NK killer cells were demonstrated in a randomized controlled trial in which patients were randomized to have videothoracoscopy under either general anesthesia or awake-‐epidural anesthesia. The authors of this clinical trial found that patients who were assigned to awake-‐ epidural anesthesia did not show a postoperative decrease in the count of NK cells.(Vanni, Tacconi et al. 2010) Unfortunately, our group demonstrated that patients who underwent thoracotomy or abdominal surgery under general anesthesia followed by postoperative epidural analgesia still showed a depress function of their NK cells (submitted for publication), thus suggesting that, in fact, a complete avoidance of general anesthetics and a dense anesthetic block may be needed to preserve some of the elements of the innate immune response. To complicate more this mater, a randomized controlled study in women undergoing laparoscopic abdominal surgery did not demonstrated any beneKicial effect of “preemtive” epidural anesthesia compared to postoperative epidural analgesia on the postoperative count of lymphocytes. (Hong and Lim 2008) In a different population of patients, Volk et al demonstrated that postoperative intravenous analgesia was associated with a higher percentage of NK cells than postoperative epidural analgesia.(Volk, Schenk et al. 2004) Thus, it appears that the potential immune protective effects of regional anesthesia at least on the innate immunity may depend on factors such as type of surgery, use of intra-‐ versus postoperative regional anesthesia, and patient population (cancer versus non-‐cancer center). A key piece in any regional anesthesia technique are local anesthetics. The effects of these agents on the immune cells are not well understood. It has been shown that local anesthetics, at concentrations found for wound inKiltration, depress the function of natural killer cells(Takagi, Kitagawa et al. 1983; Krog, Hokland et al. 2002) however, it is unknown if this phenomenon is still observed a lower concentration. Preliminary data from our laboratory Vol. 79 - Suppl. 1 to No. 3 suggest that lidocaine a doses 10 to 100 times (nanomolar) lower than those found in plasma during regional anesthesia increase the sensitivity of cancer cells to the cytotoxic effects of NK cells from cancer patients without affecting the viability of the latter. The balance between cytokines that have immune stimulating (Th1) versus immune depressive (Th2) properties is also changed in the perioperative period. It is well known there is a predominant shift towards a Th2 state during the perioperative period.(Decker, Schondorf et al. 1996; Ishikawa, Nishioka et al. 2009) Whether regional anesthesia is able to preserve or restore the Th1/Th2 balance is largely unknown. Volk et al found that the postoperative balance between the Th1 and Th2 cytokines, IL-‐8 and IL-‐10 respectively, were unchanged by the use of epidural or intravenous analgesia.(Volk, Schenk et al. 2004) Similarly, the use of spinal anesthesia was not associated with a change in the Th1/Th2 balance in patients undergoing urological surgery. (Zura, Kozmar et al. 2012) Interestingly, Alhers et al found that only the use on intraoperative thoracic epidural anesthesia compared to postoperative thoracic analgesia was associated with a predominant Th1 state.(Ahlers, Nachtigall et al. 2008) Again suggesting that the use of intraoperative regional anesthesia in order to ameliorate surgery-‐induced stress, anesthetics and opioids is more important than the initiation of regional analgesia in the postoperative period. Whether the effects of regional anesthesia/ analgesia on the immune system are linked to better postoperative clinical outcomes such as cancer recurrence has been the topic of recent publications. Early studies indicated that the use of regional analgesia was associated to lower cancer recurrence for breast and prostate cancer. (Exadaktylos, Buggy et al. 2006; Biki, Mascha et al. 2008; Capmas, Billard et al. 2012) More recent studies have refuted those early Kindings; three of these studies were conducted in patients with gastrointestinal malignancies and demonstrated no association between the use of epidural analgesia and better oncological outcomes. (Myles, Peyton et al. 2011; Cummings, Xu et al. 2012; Day, Smith et al. 2012) Our group has investigated if the use of postoperative epidural analgesia was associated with a longer recurrence free survival and mortality in patients with non-‐small cell lung cancer and in line with the studies in gastrointestinal patients, we could not Kind an association between regional analgesia MINERVA ANESTESIOLOGICA 27 ABSTRACT and better oncological outcomes. Unfortunately, all those clinical studies were retrospective hence their results and conclusions have be considered cautiously. References 1. Ahlers, O, I. Nachtigall et al. Intraoperative thoracic epidural anaesthesia attenuates stress-‐induced immunosuppression in patients undergoing major abdominal surgery. Br J Anaesth 2008;101(6):781-‐7. 2. Beagles, K., A. Wellstein et al. Systemic morphine administration suppresses genes involved in antigen presentation.” Molecular pharmacology 2004;65(2):437-42. 3. Biki, B., E. Mascha et al. Anesthetic technique for radical prostatectomy surgery affects cancer recurrence: a retrospective analysis. Anesthesiology 2008;109(2):180-7. 4. Capmas, P., V. Billard et al. Impact of epidural analgesia on survival in patients undergoing complete cytoreductive surgery for ovarian cancer. Anticancer Res 2012;32(4):1537-42. 5. Cata JP, Gottumukkala V et al. How regional anesthesia might reduce postoperative cancer recurrence. Eur J Pain 2012;Suppl 5(S2):345-55. 6. Cummings KC. Xu F et al. A comparison of epidural analgesia and traditional pain management effects on survival and cancer recurrence after colectomy: a population-‐based study. Anesthesiology 2012;116(4):797-806. 7. Day AR. Smith, et al. Retrospective analysis of the effect of postoperative analgesia on survival in patients after laparoscopic resection of colorectal cancer. Br J Anaesth 2012;109(2):185-‐190. 8. Decker, D, Schondorf M et al. Surgical stress induces a shift in the type-‐1/type-‐2 T-‐helper cell balance, suggesting down-‐regulation of cell-‐mediated and up-‐regulation of antibody-‐mediated immunity commensurate to the trauma. Surgery 1996;119(3):316-25. 9. Exadaktylos AK, Buggy DJ et al. Can anesthetic technique for primary breast cancer surgery affect recurrence or metastasis?” Anesthesiology 2006;105(4):660-4. 10. Hong JY, Lim KT. Effect of preemptive epidural analgesia on cytokine response and postoperative pain in laparoscopic radical hysterectomy for cervical cancer. Reg Anesth Pain Med 2008;33(1):44-51. 11. Ishikawa MM, Nishioka et al. Perioperative immune responses in cancer patients undergoing digestive surgeries.” World journal of surgical oncology 2009;7:7. 12. Krog J, Hokland M et al. Lipid solubility-‐ and concentration-‐dependent attenuation of in vitro natural killer cell cytotoxicity by local anesthetics. Acta Anaesthesiol Scand 2002;46(7):875-81. 13. Melamed R, Bar-‐Yosef S et al. Suppression of natural killer cell activity and promotion of tumor metastasis by ketamine, thiopental, and halothane, but not by propofol: mediating mechanisms and prophylactic measures. Anesth Analg 2003;97(5):1331-9. 14. Myles PS, Peyton P et al. Perioperative epidural analgesia for major abdominal surgery for cancer and recurrence-‐free survival: randomised trial. BMJ 2011;342:d1491. 15. Sacerdote, P. Opioids and the immune system. Palliative medicine 2006;20(Suppl 1):s9-‐15. 16. Takagi S, Kitagawa S et al. Effect of local anaesthetics on human natural killer cell activity. Clin Exp Immunol 1983;53(2):477-81. 17. Vanni, G, Tacconi F. et al. Impact of awake videothoracoscopic surgery on postoperative lymphocyte responses.” The Annals of thoracic surgery 2010;90(3):973-8. 18. Volk,T, Schenk M et al. Postoperative epidural an- 28 esthesia preserves lymphocyte, but not monocyte, immune function after major spine surgery. Anesth Analg 2004;98(4):1086-92, table of contents. 19. Zura M, Kozmar A et al. Effect of spinal and general anesthesia on serum concentration of pro-‐inKlammatory and anti-‐inKlammatory cytokines. Immunobiology 2012;217(6): 622-7. Regional anesthesia and analgesia and mortality. Is this the real important outcome? José De Andrés a,,b Miguel A. Reinac,d . aValencia University Medical School. b Anesthesia Department bDirector Multidisciplinary Pain Management Center Department of Anesthesiology and Critical Care Valencia University General Hospital. Valencia (Spain). cDepartment of Anaesthesiology, Madrid-Montepríncipe University Hospital, Madrid, Spain dDepartment of Clinical Medical Sciences and Applied Molecular Medicine Institute CEU San Pablo University School of Medicine, Madrid, Spain The debate on the outcome benefits of regional anaesthesia and analgesia over general anaesthesia and systemic analgesia has led to a large number of published papers, in particular systematic reviews and meta-analyses. If not before, at least in 1954, we found the first reference published in an indexed journal, analyzing the different anesthetic techniques used, and the variables that could result in a different outcome and possible associated morbidity (Beecher and Todd 1954). Already in this article addresses the “anesthesia as a part of the overall surgical care of the patient”. In 1987, we published an article and editorial in which we defined within the perioperative process, the variables of mortality, specifically related to anesthetic practice (Vila and De Andres 1987). From these remote references, there are a considerable number of publications on the topic, some very recently, but hovewer, the complex issues around the effect of regional anaesthesia on outcome is not completely resolved, possibly because the data are often not procedure specific. Meta-analyses have shown consistently improved analgesia with epidural techniques, but the results are by far less consistent with regard to other outcomes, in particular morbidity and mortality (Tziavrangos and Schug 2006). Although it is true that according to the evidence collected, neuraxial blockade reduces postoperative mortality and other serious complications. The size of some of these benefits remains uncertain, and further research is required to determine whether these effects are due MINERVA ANESTESIOLOGICA March 2013 ABSTRACT solely to benefits of neuraxial blockade or partly to avoidance of general anaesthesia (Rodgers A, et al. 2000). Perioperative regional anesthesia and analgesia have been shown to attenuate perioperative pathophysiology, possibly being the key factor, of patient’ improvement outcomes. Obvious benefits, such as the quality of postoperative analgesia and the decrease in hospital stay or in hospital costs, are easy to demonstrate, but proof that regional anesthesia improves the outcome from surgery is still lacking (Capdevila and Choquet 2008). It is difficult to measure differences in outcome between regional anaesthesia and general anaesthesia for perioperative mortality. Also, data interpretation is difficult because, even the best randomized studies do not have large enough patient numbers to demonstrate a clear difference in outcome. Furthermore, patient outcome examined varies from mortality to paramount of morbidity conditions (most commonly pulmonary (Ballantyne et al 1998), cardiovascular (Beattie et al 2001), and gastrointestinal (Jorgensen et al 2000)), each of which in turn have different associated variables that determine clear differences in their profile, and therefore, in its possibility of global analysis. There is general agreement that continuous thoracic epidural analgesia in major abdominal and thoracic surgery can reduce postoperative cardiovascular and pulmonary complications (Liu and Wu 2007; Pöpping et al. 2008) , improve paralytic ileus (Marret et al. 2007) , improve pain relief and attenuate catabolism (Ahlers, et al 2008; Lattermann, et al. 2007). Nevertheless, the benefit evidence appears to be limited to high-risk patients and those undergoing high-risk procedures. Two Cochrane analyses showed benefits of epidural analgesia for major abdominal surgery (Werawatganon and Charuluxanun 2005), abdominal aortic surgery (Nishimori et al. 2006), and various procedures in elderly patients, showed that epidural analgesia provides superior analgesia compared with opioid-based analgesia. The use of epidural analgesia resulted in reduced need for postoperative mechanical ventilation, reduced rate of postoperative myocardial infarction, and reduced gastric and renal complications. However, these benefits did not result in a reduction in mortality. In another Cochrane review (Parker et al, 2004), found a reduced risk for postoperative deep venous thrombosis (30% compared with 47%) and acute postoperative confusión (9.4% compared with 19.2%) in patients treated with neuraxial (mainly spinal) Vol. 79 - Suppl. 1 to No. 3 anaesthesia compared with general anaesthesia. There was no evidence for reduced perioperative mortality or other outcome parameters (myocardial infarction, pulmonary embolism, etc.). Specifically in patients undergoing hip fracture repair regional anesthesia showed reduced 1-month mortality plus a reduction in the rate of deep vein thrombosis (Urwin et al, 2000) , but 3 months mortality, is the same as for general anaesthesia. The largest and most significant meta-analysis (Rodgers et al, 2000) evaluated 144 published papers, involved over 9500 patients, and confirmed several benefits of regional anaesthesia (alone or in combination with general anaesthesia) compared with general anaesthesia alone. There was a reduction in the risk of mortality from all causes after major surgery of 30% in the regional anaesthesia group compared with the general anaesthesia group. After all the data reviewed, the important question is whether the benefits associated with regional anaesthesia lead directly to measurable clinical improvements such as fewer complications, lower mortality and better outcome from surgery. We consider, the present data do not allow us to answer these questions satisfactorily. Under our consideration is, because the answer depends on many interdependent factors: patients, surgery, outcomes, other factors that control the outcomes, how the regional anaesthesia is being used, and what it is being compared. In healthy patients adverse outcome is extremely rare, so there is unlikely to be a difference in outcome between regional anaesthesia and general anaesthesia. On the other hand, in patients with lung desease, and those undergoing thoracic and upper abdominal procedures, postoperative epidural analgesia is likely to be beneficial (Ballantyne et al 1998). In patients with heart disease regional anesthesia may be beneficial, by reducing pain and stress, improving pulmonary function and oxygenation, and improving mobility and decreasing hospital stay (Yeager et al., 1998). Since regional anesthesia alone is only suitable for extremity, head and neck and body surface surgery, the comparison with general anesthesia can only by made for this limited range of procedures. Combining regional anesthesia with general anesthesia broadens the scope, and increases the difficulty in the right answer.It is obvious there is not a standard general anaesthetsia procedure. This makes it an independent variable and different comparator. No outcome study or meta-analysis MINERVA ANESTESIOLOGICA 29 ABSTRACT considers the individual skills and the directly associated success rates. In the author’s opinion, failed blocks are probably the most important factors for negative outcome (Kettner et al. 2011). Some authors consider the main factor for not having consistent data, the lack of consistent graded regional anesthetic morbidity and mortality system according to the intensity of therapy required for the treatment of the defined complication (Stojadinovic et al., 2009; Buckenmaieret al, 2009). According these authors structured format for the reporting of regional anesthesia complications allows for identifying important issues in risk management in regional anesthesia, thereby providing opportunities for further investigation and clinical practice refinement. Whether specific regional anaesthetic techniques or local anaesthetics influence the course of illness is currently an important topic, and we consider will be an special research topic in the future. What we can say regional anaesthesia in the right patients and the right situations, it can improve surgical outcome. References 1. Ahlers O, Nachtigall I, Lenze J et al. Intraoperative tho- racic epidural anaesthesia attenuates stress-induced immunosuppression in patients undergoing major abdominal surgery. Br J Anaesth 2008;101:781-7. 2. Ballantyne JC, Carr DB, de Ferranti S et al. The comparative effects of postoperative analgesic therapies on pulmonary outcome: cumulative meta-analysis of randomised controlled trials. Anesth Analg 1998;86:598-612. 3. Beattie WS, Badner NH, Choi P. Epidural analgesia reduces postoperative myocardial infarction: a meta-analysis. Anesth Analg 2001;93:853-8. 4. Beecher H, Todd DP. Study of the deaths associated waith anesthesia and surgery. Based on a study of 599,548 anesthesias in ten institutions 1948-1952, inclusive. Annals of Surgery 1954;140:2-34. 5. Buckenmaier CC 3rd, Croll SM, Shields CH, Shockey SM, Bleckner LL, Malone G, Plunkett A, McKnight GM, Kwon KH, Joltes R, Stojadinovic A. Advanced regional anesthesia morbidity and mortality grading system: regional anesthesia outcomes reporting (ROAR). Pain Med 2009;10(6):111522. 6. Capdevila X, Choquet O. Does regional anaesthesia improve outcome? Facts and dreams Techniques in Regional Anesthesia and Pain Management 2008;12:161-2. 7. Jorgensen S, Wettersler J, Moiniche S, Dahl JB. Epidural local anaesthetics versus opioid-based analgesic regimens on postoperative gastrointestinal paralysis, PONV and pain after abdominal surgery. Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews 2000;4:CD 001893. 8. Kettner SC, Willschke H, Marhofer P. Does regional anaesthesia really improve outcome? Br J Anaesth. 2011;107 Suppl 1:i90-i955. 9. Lattermann R, Wykes L, Eberhart L et al. A randomized controlled trial of the anticatabolic effect of epidural analgesia and hypocaloric glucose. Reg Anesth Pain Med 2007; 32:227-32. 10. Liu SS, Wu CL. Effect of postoperative analgesia on major 30 postoperative complications: a systematic update of the evidence. Anesth Analg 2007;104:689-702. 11. Marret E, Remy C, Bonnet F et al. Meta-analysis of epidural analgesia versus parenteral opioid analgesia after colorectal surgery. Br J Surg 2007;94:665-73. 12. Nishimori M, Ballantyne JC, Low JH. Epidural pain relief versus systemic opioid-based pain relief for abdominal aortic surgery. Cochrane Database Syst Rev 2006;3:CD005059. 13. Parker MJ, Handoll HH, Griffiths R. Anaesthesia for hip fracture surgery in adults. Cochrane Database Syst Rev 2004;CD000521. 14. Pöpping DM, Elia N, Marret E et al. Protective effects of epidural analgesia on pulmonary complications after abdominal and thoracic surgery: a meta-analysis. Arch Surg 2008;143:990-9. 15. Rodgers A, Walker N, Schug S, McKee A, Kehlet H, van Zundert A, Sage D, Futter M, Saville G, Clark T, MacMahon S. Reduction of postoperative mortality and morbidity with epidural or spinal anaesthesia: results from overview of randomised trials. BMJ. 2000;321:1493. 16. Stojadinovic A, Shockey SM, Croll SM, Buckenmaier CC 3rd. Quality of reporting of regional anesthesia outcomes in the literature. Pain Med. 2009;10(6):1123-31. 17. Tziavrangos E, Schug SA. Regional anaesthesia and perioperative outcome. Curr Opin Anaesthesiol. 2006;19:521-5. 18. Urwin S C, Parker M J, Griffiths R. General versus regional anaesthesia for hip fracture surgery: a meta-analysis of randomised trials. Br J Anaesth 2000;84:450-5. 19. Vila M., De Andres JA. Editorial: Epidemiology in Anesthesiology. One subject, pending in Spain. Rev Esp Anestesiol Reanim1987;34:171-2 (english Abstract). 20. Vila M., De Andres JA. Morbidity and mortality in the clinical practice of anesthesiology-Critical Care. An updated review and recommendations for our country. Rev Esp Anestesiol Reanim 1987;34:196-205(english Abstract). 21. Werawatganon T, Charuluxanun S. Patient controlled intravenous opioid analgesia versus continuous epidural analgesia for pain after intra-abdominal surgery. Cochrane Database Syst Rev 2005; CD004088. 22. Yeager MP, Glass DD, Neff RK., Brinck-Johnsen T. Epidural anaesthesia and analgesia in high-risk surgical patients. Anesthesiology 1987;66:729-36. Role of regional anesthesia in fast-track surgery. Beyond analgesia? Franco Carli, MD Department of Anesthesia, McGill University Health Centre, Montreal, QC, Canada Regional anesthesia, whether conduction blockade or peripheral nerve block or infiltration of local anesthetics, has been shown to be associated with several recognized physiologic advantages These beneficial effects could, in principle, provide optimal conditions for a successful implementation of fast-track surgery. However, on a critical analysis, the literature is not always clear whether the influence of regional anesthesia techniques can always be MINERVA ANESTESIOLOGICA March 2013 ABSTRACT positive or negative, and whether these physiologic benefits can be translated in facilitating the implementation of fast-track methods, thus accelerating surgical rehabilitation. On the basis of what has been reported with regard to the physiologic effects of regional anesthesia on various organ functions, the clinical impact of regional anesthesia techniques on some of the components of fast-track surgery has been identified. From the published literature, there is a strong indication that in most circumstances both central neural blockade and peripheral neural blockade have positive effect and therefore can contribute to an improved outcome. It might still be difficult to determine how a sole intervention such as regional anesthesia might have an impact on outcome; thus, it is necessary to consider regional anesthesia more as a therapeutic modality aimed at limiting organ dysfunction in the context of surgical stress. However, we wish to emphasize that other components associated with traditional anesthesia and surgical practice have to be revised to facilitate the positive effects of regional anesthesia and the components of enhanced rehabilitation. For example, the revised practice of preoperative fasting, bowel cleansing, and the earlier removal urinary catheters and drains has been shown to have a positive impact on patient outcome. The concept of integrating regional anesthesia within a multimodal, evidence-based program requires collaboration from the anesthesiologist, with particular attention to each surgical procedure. This can be achieved if there is a process by which members of the medical and nursing team address all aspects of care starting from the preoperative preparation and continuing after surgery. During the last decade, efforts have been made to provide scientific evidence for the fast-track concept, with the intent to improve patient outcome and contain health-related costs. Fasttrack surgery represents an extension of the clinical pathway, integrating new modalities in surgery, anesthesia, and nutrition, enforcing early mobilization and oral feeding, with an emphasis on reduction of the surgical stress response. This strategy is designed not only to improve efficiency by reducing hospital stay and variability, like any standardized protocol, but also to decrease the physiologic impact of major surgery and thereby reduce organ dysfunction and recovery time. Guidelines and Vol. 79 - Suppl. 1 to No. 3 multimodal programs have been published, and regional anesthesia and multimodal analgesia techniques specific for some surgical procedures have been included. Nevertheless, there are several publications on fast-track where anesthesia and analgesia are briefly mentioned, indicating the absence of an anesthesiologist as part of the perioperative team. This demonstrates that there is more work tobe done to determine how the anesthetic and surgical interventions can integrate appropriately. Several elements seem relativelyconsistent between fast-track centers, at least in colorectalsurgery (eg, thoracic epidural, philosophy to feed and ambulateearly), whereas several others are more variable (eg, use of bowel preparation, feeding protocol, preoperative carbohydrate, specific anesthesia protocol). With time, large multi-institutional studies are undertaken, and the results become reproducible andgeneralizable. From the review of the present literature, it is clear that there is a need to expand the knowledge on how to optimize the existing regional anesthesia techniques and develop new ones within the context of fast-track procedures. This is particularly true with the continuous advances in surgical technology and the minimally invasive surgery. To achieve such a goal, it is necessary to set up a multidisciplinary systematic approach, and examples such as ERAS and PROSPECT are worthy attempts in this direction. Although there have been several publications in the surgical literature on the positive impact of fast-track programs on outcome, studies to assess the specific role of regional anesthesia techniques in the context of fast-track surgery and assess the impact on outcome have been few. Some explanations can be proposed: the lack of awareness of advances in fast-track surgery among the anesthesia community, the lack of interest in accessing surgical literature, issues of liability in initiating something new, the realization that the process of implementation is too long with many barriers, the belief that fast-track is a surgical and not anesthetic issue, andfinally resistance to new ideas. Even introduction of innovations based on published evidence is a long process that requires education and unbiased information. To address these issues, collaboration with surgical teams needs to be strengthened, views on various aspects of perioperative care exchanged, and scientific articles on the impact MINERVA ANESTESIOLOGICA 31 ABSTRACT of anesthesia on fast-track surgery published. Another challenge facing the anesthesiologist is how to assess the impact of anesthetic techniques on outcome in the patient can return home to step into a rehabilitation program. As yet, little research has been undertaken to better describe the process of recovery, and currently there is no accepted outcome measure to define the length of clinical recovery. Other clinical outcomes often used are readmission rate and complication rate. Although both are useful indicators of recovery progress, there is a need to define whether the complication is directly related to the surgical technique per se or trauma-induced organ dysfunction. Assessment of the effectiveness of regional anesthesia techniques can be based on the assumption that these interventions have an immediate direct impact on pain, mobilization, and oral feeding as a result of their physiologic effect and hopefully on the process of rehabilitation. In summary, the future may be bright for regional anesthesia, provided that the positive effect on perioperative pathophysiology is used when combined with the fast-track methodology. context of fast track. Hospital stay is the most common outcome measure used to assess the success of fast-track program, but this measure is confounded by nonphysiologic parameters that are more related to administrative and organizational issues. In fact, even within fast-track programs, a minority of patients are discharged on the day of functional recovery. Nevertheless, if length of hospital stay reflects how well patients reach the criteria for discharge, then it can be a valuable indicator assuming that patient can return home to step into a rehabilitation program. As yet, little research has been undertaken to better describe the process of recovery, and currently there is no accepted outcome measure to define the length of clinical recovery. Other clinical outcomes often used are readmission rate and complication rate. Although both are useful indicators of recovery progress, there is a need to define whether the complication is directly related to the surgical technique per se or trauma-induced organ dysfunction. Assessment of the effectiveness of regional anesthesia techniques can be based on the assumption that these interventions have an immediate direct impact on pain, mobilization, and oral feeding as a result of their physiologic effect 32 and hopefully on the process of rehabilitation. In summary, the future may be bright for regional anesthesia, provided that the positive effect on perioperative pathophysiology is used when combined with the fast-track methodology. Ultrasound guidance in regional anesthesia: what is the evidence? Edward R. Mariano, MD, MAS (Clinical Research) Department of Anesthesia VA Palo Alto Health Care System, Palo Alto, CA, USA; Stanford University School of Medicine, Stanford, CA, USA The use of ultrasound guidance in the practice of regional anesthesia arguably began in the late 1980s,1 although ultrasound Doppler technology was used to direct needle insertion for peripheral nerve blockade in the 1970s.2 This past decade has seen a rapid increase in practical applications and clinical research in the field of ultrasound-guided regional anesthesia (UGRA), and the American Society of Regional Anesthesia and Pain Medicine (ASRA) and European Society of Regional Anesthesia have even published joint committee guidelines for training in this discipline.3 Given the rapid evolution of UGRA, evidence to support this practice was initially limited; however, many studies have emerged recently in an attempt to determine the role of ultrasound guidance. In 2010, ASRA published a series of important articles which distill the body of evidence related to UGRA up to that time point.4-12 Publications evaluated for contribution to the evidence included randomized clinical trials (RCTs), meta-analyses and systematic reviews, and case series of 10 or more patients;9 RCTs were assessed for quality using the Jadad scoring system.13 Additional studies have been completed and published since 2010 and will be included in the update to be presented at the 2013 ASRA Spring annual meeting and subsequently published. Ultrasound Guidance for Extremity Peripheral Nerve Blocks The 2010 ASRA systematic review of ultrasound in terms of block characteristics includes 24 RCTs which compare ultrasound guidance to an alternative nerve localization technique for MINERVA ANESTESIOLOGICA March 2013 ABSTRACT either upper or lower extremity peripheral nerve blockade.5 For both upper and lower extremity blocks, the majority of studies report faster block onset when ultrasound is employed,5, 6, 11 although 5 of 15 studies in the upper extremity and 2 of 5 studies in the lower extremity fail to find a difference in onset time.5 There is evidence to support a decrease in procedural time when ultrasound is used for upper and lower extremity blocks;6, 11 however, set-up time and pre-scanning with ultrasound are not consistently measured or reported. In terms of block quality, lower extremity studies are more likely to report an advantage with ultrasound than upper extremity studies; only 4 of 16 upper extremity studies show improvement with ultrasound, and these studies use nerve stimulation or transarterial injection as the comparator.5 When a fixed time point was used for assessing block success, ultrasound use is more likely to show an advantage in success rate although the definitions of successful block vary widely.6, 11 Only one study in the upper extremity shows a difference in block duration in favor of ultrasound while all other RCTs do not demonstrate a difference.5 For femoral and subgluteal sciatic nerve blocks, ultrasound use decreases the minimum effective anesthesia volume to achieve a successful block in 50% of patients.11 There is no evidence to support an improvement in patient safety when using ultrasound versus other techniques.8 Ultrasound for Continuous Peripheral Nerve Blocks Although many large case series describing ultrasound-guided techniques for continuous peripheral nerve block (CPNB) performance have been published, there are relatively-fewer RCTs comparing ultrasound to other nerve localization techniques for CPNB. When an exclusively ultrasound-guided technique is compared to a stimulating catheter technique, procedural duration is shorter with ultrasound at four distinct insertion sites 14-17 with less procedure-related pain for lower extremity catheters 14, 16 and fewer inadvertent vascular punctures for femoral and infraclavicular catheters.14, 15 Most studies report similar analgesia and other acute pain outcomes from catheters placed with ultrasound when compared to other methods,18-20 with the exception of one study involving popliteal-sciatic catheters which suggests that stimulating catheters may provide an analgesic advantage although successful placement occurs less often.21 Vol. 79 - Suppl. 1 to No. 3 Ultrasound for Truncal and Neuraxial Blocks To date, RCTs comparing ultrasound guidance to traditional techniques for paravertebral blockade or transversus abdominis plane (TAP) blocks have yet to be reported. For both of these procedures, the 2010 ASRA systematic review recommends the use of ultrasound although this recommendation is based on case series data only.4 In one study comparing ultrasound-guided TAP to conventional ilioinguinal/ iliohypogastric nerve blocks for inguinal hernia repair, subjects who received ultrasound-guided TAP blocks reported lower pain scores for the first 24 hours.22 Ultrasound-guidance and the landmark-based technique for ilioinguinal/iliohypogastric nerve blocks have been compared in children with the ultrasound-guided technique resulting in decreased need for systemic analgesic supplementation.23 For neuraxial blocks, there is evidence to support ultrasound scanning prior to employing conventional neuraxial block techniques rather than relying solely on surface landmarks,10 especially in patients with challenging anatomy.24 However, there are relativelyfewer RCTs related to ultrasound for neuraxial blockade compared to peripheral nerve blockade. Studies involving neuraxial blocks in adults primarily employ pre-scanning to identify midline, select the most appropriate interspace, or estimate depth to the target. Pre-scanning with ultrasound may decrease the number of needle redirections and number of interspaces attempted in adults and reduce instances of bony contact when used for real-time epidural placement in children.10 Ultrasound for Regional Anesthesia in Special Populations Ultrasound-guided techniques for peripheral 25 and neuraxial 26 blocks in children have been described previously. The 2010 ASRA evidencebased review on ultrasound for pediatric regional anesthesia included 6 RCTs involving peripheral nerve blocks and one randomized trial in neuraxial blockade in addition to case series of >10 patients.12 In this population, ultrasound may improve the speed of block onset and duration of analgesia for peripheral nerve blocks, increase the success rates for truncal blocks compared to blind techniques, and reduce the volume of local anesthetic required for successful blocks.12 In obese patients, ultrasound may play a role in identifying target peripheral and neuraxial structures as well as real-time MINERVA ANESTESIOLOGICA 33 ABSTRACT procedural performance.27 For epidural placement in obese parturients, ultrasound-estimated depth to the epidural space correlates well with actual depths measured by needle insertion.28 When performing CPNB in obese patients, procedural time is not prolonged compared to non-obese patients when using ultrasound.29 In summary, there is sufficient evidence to support the use of ultrasound guidance for peripheral nerve blockade based on short-term outcomes. Additional prospective studies are needed to further define the role of ultrasound in neuraxial blockade, long-term patient outcomes, and advantages in special populations. References 1. Ting PL, Sivagnanaratnam V. Ultrasonographic study of the spread of local anaesthetic during axillary brachial plexus block. Br J Anaesth 1989;63:326-9. 2. la Grange P, Foster PA, Pretorius LK. Application of the Doppler ultrasound bloodflow detector in supraclavicular brachial plexus block. Br J Anaesth 1978;50:965-7. 3. Sites BD, Chan VW, Neal JM, Weller R, Grau T, Koscielniak-Nielsen ZJ, Ivani G. The American Society of Regional Anesthesia and Pain Medicine and the European Society Of Regional Anaesthesia and Pain Therapy Joint Committee recommendations for education and training in ultrasound-guided regional anesthesia. Reg Anesth Pain Med 2009;34: 40-6. 4. Abrahams MS, Horn JL, Noles LM, Aziz MF. Evidencebased medicine: ultrasound guidance for truncal blocks. Reg Anesth Pain Med 2010;35:S36-42. 5. Liu SS, Ngeow J, John RS. Evidence basis for ultrasoundguided block characteristics: onset, quality, and duration. Reg Anesth Pain Med 2010;35:S26-35. 6. McCartney CJ, Lin L, Shastri U. Evidence basis for the use of ultrasound for upper-extremity blocks. Reg Anesth Pain Med 2010;35:S10-5. 7. Narouze SN. Ultrasound-guided interventional procedures in pain management: Evidence-based medicine. Reg Anesth Pain Med 2010;35:S55-8. 8. Neal JM. Ultrasound-guided regional anesthesia and patient safety: An evidence-based analysis. Reg Anesth Pain Med 2010;35:S59-67. 9. Neal JM, Brull R, Chan VW, Grant SA, Horn JL, Liu SS, McCartney CJ, Narouze SN, Perlas A, Salinas FV, Sites BD, Tsui BC. The ASRA evidence-based medicine assessment of ultrasound-guided regional anesthesia and pain medicine: Executive summary. Reg Anesth Pain Med 2010;35:S1-9. 10. Perlas A. Evidence for the use of ultrasound in neuraxial blocks. Reg Anesth Pain Med 2010;35:S43-6. 11. Salinas FV. Ultrasound and review of evidence for lower extremity peripheral nerve blocks. Reg Anesth Pain Med 2010;35:S16-25. 12. Tsui BC, Pillay JJ. Evidence-based medicine: Assessment of ultrasound imaging for regional anesthesia in infants, children, and adolescents. Reg Anesth Pain Med 2010;35:S47-54. 13. Jadad AR, Moore RA, Carroll D, Jenkinson C, Reynolds DJ, Gavaghan DJ, McQuay HJ. Assessing the quality of reports of randomized clinical trials: is blinding necessary? Control Clin Trials 1996;17:1-12. 14. Mariano ER, Cheng GS, Choy LP, Loland VJ, Bellars RH, Sandhu NS, Bishop ML, Lee DK, Maldonado RC, 34 Ilfeld BM. Electrical stimulation versus ultrasound guidance for popliteal-sciatic perineural catheter insertion: a randomized controlled trial. Reg Anesth Pain Med 2009;34:480-5. 15. Mariano ER, Loland VJ, Bellars RH, Sandhu NS, Bishop ML, Abrams RA, Meunier MJ, Maldonado RC, Ferguson EJ, Ilfeld BM. Ultrasound guidance versus electrical stimulation for infraclavicular brachial plexus perineural catheter insertion. J Ultrasound Med 2009;28:1211-8. 16. Mariano ER, Loland VJ, Sandhu NS, Bellars RH, Bishop ML, Afra R, Ball ST, Meyer RS, Maldonado RC, Ilfeld BM. Ultrasound guidance versus electrical stimulation for femoral perineural catheter insertion. J Ultrasound Med 2009; 28:1453-60. 17. Mariano ER, Loland VJ, Sandhu NS, Bellars RH, Bishop ML, Meunier MJ, Afra R, Ferguson EJ, Ilfeld BM. A trainee-based randomized comparison of stimulating interscalene perineural catheters with a new technique using ultrasound guidance alone. J Ultrasound Med 2010;29:329-36. 18. Ilfeld BM. Continuous peripheral nerve blocks: a review of the published evidence. Anesth Analg 2011;113:90425. 19. Fredrickson MJ, Danesh-Clough TK: Ambulatory continuous femoral analgesia for major knee surgery: a randomised study of ultrasound-guided femoral catheter placement. Anaesth Intensive Care 2009;37:758-66. 20. Choi S, Brull R. Is ultrasound guidance advantageous for interventional pain management? A review of acute pain outcomes. Anesth Analg 2011;113:596-604. 21. Mariano ER, Loland VJ, Sandhu NS, Bishop ML, Lee DK, Schwartz AK, Girard PJ, Ferguson EJ, Ilfeld BM. Comparative efficacy of ultrasound-guided and stimulating popliteal-sciatic perineural catheters for postoperative analgesia. Can J Anaesth 2010;57:919-26. 22. Aveline C, Le Hetet H, Le Roux A, Vautier P, Cognet F, Vinet E, Tison C, Bonnet F. Comparison between ultrasound-guided transversus abdominis plane and conventional ilioinguinal/iliohypogastric nerve blocks for day-case open inguinal hernia repair. Br J Anaesth 2011;106:380-6. 23. Willschke H, Marhofer P, Bosenberg A, Johnston S, Wanzel O, Cox SG, Sitzwohl C, Kapral S. Ultrasonography for ilioinguinal/iliohypogastric nerve blocks in children. Br J Anaesth 2005;95:226-30. 24. Chin KJ, Perlas A, Chan V, Brown-Shreves D, Koshkin A, Vaishnav V. Ultrasound imaging facilitates spinal anesthesia in adults with difficult surface anatomic landmarks. Anesthesiology 2011;115:94-101. 25. Tsui B, Suresh S. Ultrasound imaging for regional anesthesia in infants, children, and adolescents: a review of current literature and its application in the practice of extremity and trunk blocks. Anesthesiology 2010;112:473-92. 26. Tsui BC, Suresh S. Ultrasound imaging for regional anesthesia in infants, children, and adolescents: a review of current literature and its application in the practice of neuraxial blocks. Anesthesiology 2010;112:719-28. 27. Brodsky JB, Mariano ER. Regional anaesthesia in the obese patient: lost landmarks and evolving ultrasound guidance. Best Pract Res Clin Anaesthesiol 2011;25:61-72. 28. Balki M, Lee Y, Halpern S, Carvalho JC. Ultrasound imaging of the lumbar spine in the transverse plane: the correlation between estimated and actual depth to the epidural space in obese parturients. Anesth Analg 2009;108:187681. 29. Mariano ER, Brodsky JB. Comparison of procedural times for ultrasound-guided perineural catheter insertion in obese and nonobese patients. J Ultrasound Med 2011;30:1357-61. MINERVA ANESTESIOLOGICA March 2013 ABSTRACT Role of multimodal anesthetic and analgesic regimens in cancer surgery Vijaya Gottumukkala M.B;B.S, M.D (Anes), F.R.C.A Cancer Anesthesia Fellowship Program Department of Anesthesiology & Perioperative Medicine. The University of Texas M.D.Anderson Cancer CenterUnit-409, 1515 Holcombe BlvdHouston, Texas 77030-4009 Cancer is a major public health problem that affects citizens across all societies in the world. The incidence of cancer is increasing at a rapid pace due to environmental factors, life style choices, and longer life expectancies. It is the plague of the modern era. Cancer currently accounts for nearly 1 out of every 4 deaths in the United States. In addition, people 65 years or older have a cancer incidence rate 10 times greater than the rate for younger people, and the mortality rate for older cancer patients is 16 times greater than younger patients. Cancer is no longer a terminal disease. With advances in diagnosis and therapeutic modalities, cancer is now considered a chronic medical condition. As of January 2012, there are close to 14 million cancer survivors in the US alone. 64 % of cancer survivors in the United States live for more than 5 years, 15 % live for over 20 years and 45 % of all cancer survivors are over 70 years of age. So, it is likely that patients with Cancer will continue to need the services of our specialty well beyond their primary oncologic care. Cancer care currently costs 60 billion dollars every year in the US aloneA number that is certain to increase with the impending demographic shift. Our understanding of the mechanisms of perioperative tumor spread and control is rapidly evolving and offers an opportunity to positively influence patient outcomes. The perioperative period is characterized by a state of intense emotional and surgical stress, pain, inflammation, immune suppression, and an environment for pro-angiogenesis. While many of these responses to surgical injury (incision) are important for healing and recovery of function, uncontrolled - they can have significant negative consequences on long term outcomes. Despite significant advances in understanding the mechanisms of acute surgical (incisional) pain, patient surveys continue to show poor satisfaction rates with pain control in the postoperative period. Goal of perioperative management strategies in the Cancer patient are not only to attenuate the surgical stress response and provide effective analgesia, but also to focus on patient centered outcomes and positively influence recurrence free and overall survival. Vol. 79 - Suppl. 1 to No. 3 While opioid medications have been the mainstay of analgesic regimens and may still be necessary to control acute post-surgical pain, they have significant side effects. The opioid related side effects are not inconsequential. A British study looking at the incidence of inpatient adverse drug reactions found that 16 percent were attributable to opioids, making opioids one of the most frequently implicated drugs in adverse reactions. Of the opioid-related adverse drug events reported to The Joint Commission’s Sentinel Event database (2004-2011), 47 percent were wrong dose medication errors, 29 percent were related to improper monitoring of the patient, and 11 percent were related to other factors, including excessive dosing, medication interactions and adverse drug reactions. These reports underscore the need for the judicious and safe prescribing and administration of opioids, the need for appropriate monitoring of patients and most importantly to consider nonopioid multimodal strategies when appropriate. In addition, it is well known that opioids have depressant actions on the immune system (NK cell function), and are thought to directly promote tumor growth by suppressing tumor apoptosis, increasing endothelial cell proliferation, migration, and protease release, increasing endothelial permeability, and inducing angiogenesis. These putative effects on tumor spread are however not clinically proved through randomized control trials. Regional anesthesia/analgesia techniques using local anesthetic agents offer an alternative to opioid based analgesic regimens. However, it should also be realized that regional analgesic techniques may be contraindicated (immune-suppressed, coagulopathic) or inapplicable in some patients (patient refusal or type of surgery) with Cancer. Anesthesiologists and perioperative clinicians have to therefore resort to multimodal techniques for perioperative care of the cancer patient- where the goal is to minimize the stress response, positively modulate the inflammatory response, preserve immunological function and provide an environment that minimizes tumor growth (angiogenesis) and spread. Anesthetic drugs also appear to have direct actions on neoplastic cells, possibly by upstream effector-mediated activation of the Hypoxia Inducing Factor (HIF system). Currently there are no randomized controlled studies which offer clear benefits of one anesthetic technique over the other in terms of recurrence free survival or overall survival after cancer surgery. Nonetheless, given the increasing numbers of pa- MINERVA ANESTESIOLOGICA 35 ABSTRACT tients undergoing cancer surgery worldwide, such a strategy is warranted. NANO (No Inhalational Agent No Systemic Opioids) is one such multimodal approach for the perioperative care of cancer patient when regional block is an acceptable technique for providing perioperative analgesia. This technique involves an effective regional block, avoiding volatile anesthetic agents and parenteral opioids, use of intravenous agents (lidocaine, dexmedetomidine, propofol and sub-anesthetic doses of ketamine) with known anti-inflammatory actions for intraoperative anesthesia, and preoperative COX-2 inhibitors- gabapentinoids - oral tramadol - IV acetaminophen as part of the multimodal regimen. We also incorporate active blood management protocols, intraoperative temperature and glycemic control, and maintaining optimal hemodynamic and metabolic milieu by goal directed fluid therapy. Feasibility studies in our institution have shown this to be a very effective technique for even major procedures extending up to 15 hours. Our experience with over 130 patients has been very encouraging. Our hope is to develop a multi-institutional collaborative to study NANO on both short and long term outcomes in patients with cancer. References 1. American Cancer Society. Cancer Treatment and Survivorship Facts & Figures 2012-3. 2. J Natl Cancer Inst 2011;103:117-28. 3. The Global Economic Cost of Cancer: American Cancer Society; 2010. 4. National Cancer Institute. SEER Cancer Statistics Review 1975-2008. 5. Davies EC et al. Adverse Drug Reactions in Hospital InPatients: A Prospective Analysis of 3695 Patient-Episodes, PLOS ONE, February 2009;4(2):e4439. 6. Singleton & Moss. Future Oncol 2010;6(8):1237-42. 7. Apfelbaum JL, et al. Anesth Analg 2003;97:534-40. 8. Perkins FM, Kehlet H. Anesthesiology 2000;93:1123-33. 9. TJC Sentinel Event Alert, Issue 49 Page 2. Paravertebral blocks Juan Francisco Asenjo MD Department of Anesthesia and Alan Edwards McGill Pain Center, McGill University Health Center, Montreal Qc, Canada The wedged space lateral to the Spine is the Paravertebral region. It goes from the Cervical Spine down to the Lumbar region. The Anterior Paravertebral Space (APS) is the area lateral to de spine anterior to the Transverse Processes (TP) of 36 the Vertebral Bodies and the Posterior Paravertebral Space is made of the structures lateral to the spine posterior to the Transverse Processes. At the Cervical and Lumbar levels, the APS contain muscles, but not so in the Thoracic segment where the pleura and lung are found. The lateral extension of the Paravertebral Space is ill defined and depends of the level of the spine. In general it contains the muscles that stabilize and move the spine, the nerve roots, sympathetic chain, segmental arteries and veins, fat, etc .1 The deposit of local anesthetics or other analgesic molecules in this area is called Paravertebral Block and can be made by single shot injections or continues techniques with catheters. Although the original description of the approach to the Paravertebral Space was made almost 100 years ago, the technique did not gained clinical popularity until the 1990’s after a paper by Eason and Wyatt in 1979 2 revamped the block at thoracic level and later in the 2000’s Boezaart used the cervical access with the nerve stimulator.3 When deposited in the PVB space, local anesthethics become in close contact with the sympathetic communicants ramii as well as with the nerve roots making them a good target for conduction blockade. Depending of the level of the spine as well as the volume of local anesthetic utilized, the block occasionally may become bilateral by virtue of crossing in front of the spine to the contralateral paravertebral side or via the access of the medication into the epidural space and then to the contralateral roots. Indications: PVB in the cervical region are generally used as a substitute for Interscalene plexus blocks, covering better the superior and median trunks. At the Thoracic level PVB are used to control pain of rib fractures, post thoracotomy pain, after VATS, in the control of herpetic neuralgia and in breast and cardiac surgery. Lumbar uses relate to hip/knee operations, bone marrow harvesting procedures as well as fractures between the hip and knee. These approaches have also been used to inject neurolytic agents to control cancer pain. Contraindications: The traditional contraindications for regional blocks apply to PVB as well. Cervical Paravertebral blockade: Andre Boezaart promoted the posterior approach (or cervical paravertebral approach) to the brachial plexus. Later, with the use of ultrasound, it became evident that the paravertebral block was simple and safe to do in lieu of the classic Interscalene block. With the patient comfortably on lateral position, the ultra- MINERVA ANESTESIOLOGICA March 2013 ABSTRACT sound transducer is placed on the side of the neck in short axis to identify the interscalene groove, the upper and middle trunks as well as the Middle Scalenous muscle. The skin and muscles should be generously frozen starting at an entry point about 1 – 2 cm posterior to the most posterior edge of the transducer for an intended in-plane access. Then the needle is advanced under direct view through the skin, fascias and muscles to the interscalene groove. Hydro dissection with 3-5 mls of local anesthetic is used to confirm appropriate spread of the local anesthetic around the trunks/roots and a catheter can be inserted under direct view. Once the tip of the catheter is seen in the correct location, 15-30 ml of the solution (or 0.4-0.5 ml/kg in children) are injected again with US view to check that appropriate spread is achieved from the catheter to prevent secondary failure. Thoracic Paravertebral blockade: The classic thoracic paravertebral approach with nerve stimulator or by landmarks is performed with the patient sitting or prone. A point 2.5 cm lateral to the Spinous Process is marked on the skin at the levels intended to be blocked. Local anesthesia is injected in the skin and deeper planes. The needle is advanced perpendicular to the skin to contact the Transverse Process or the Pars. 1 – 2 ml more of local anesthesia should be administered at that point. Then, the needle is “walked over” or underneath the Transverse Process; typically to 0.8 – 1.5 cm deeper than the first bone contact. If nerve stimulation is used (usually higher current than for peripheral nerve is requiered, start at 2-3 mAmps), the patient and the operator will perceive a segmentary intercostal contraction. If Loss-of-Resistance is used, (better with DW5% to allow for stimulation) a “loss” will be felt on reaching target right after crossing the Costo-transverse ligament. Three to 4 ml of local anesthethic are injected per level. The rate of success is better when using nerve stimulation.4 A catheter could be advanced to achieve a continuous technique requiring about 3ml of anesthetic per level to block. Beside the clinical effect in terms of good pain relief, when the technique is used for thoracic surgery a bolus of methylene blue can be injected in the intraoperative period to confirm by direct view the blue color spreading along the paravertebral region. A single level injection vs. multilevel seems to have the same success rate with better patient satisfaction in VAT surgery.5 US-guidance is an excellent option to deliver local anesthetics into the Vol. 79 - Suppl. 1 to No. 3 Paravertebral Space; with the patient in prone decubitus, the paravertebral area is scanned in short-axis with a curve probe in normal/large patients and a straight probe in skinny individuals. Once the Spinous process, lamina and transverse process are identified, the probe is carefully moved laterally and progressively rotated to become aligned with the intercostal spaces. At that point, the optimal view should show the transverse process and the intercostal space with the brightness of the pleura clearly showing as it “sinks” medially under the TP demarking the lateral border of the APS. After proper preparation and local anesthesia, the needle is advanced in-plane from lateral-to-medial to reach the area immediately under the TP, where the echografic shadow of the TP will hide the needle tip. At that point the catheter can be advanced and or the local anesthetic deposited. In the UK, PVB is the most common technique to block pain after VATS.6 Lumbar Paravertebral Blockade: At this level PVB are performed with the use of neurostimulation, clinical landmarks, fluoroscopy and US. Two techniques are advocated using echo; One closer to the spine in long axis view, and the second in sort axis and with a postero-lateral approach. Using the nerve stimulator, the entry point in a perpendicular approach is located at the level of the 4th lumbar spinous process and 4 cm lateral, advancing the needle until getting a Quadriceps response or contacting bone. Once in target, 20-30 ml of local anesthetic are injected to obtain excellent analgesia in the distribution of the lumbar plexo and a catheter can be advanced for continuous techniques. Complications of the PVB: They include epidural analgesia, intrathecal catheter placement, nerve trauma, hematoma, pneumothorax, infection. References 1. Hamilton WJ. Textbook of Human Anatomy. 2. Eason MJ, Wyatt R. Paravertebral thoracic block-a reappraisal. Anaesthesia 1979;34:638-42. 3. Boezaart A.P. Atlas of Peripheral Nerve Blocks and Anatomy for Orthopedic Anesthesia. 4. Aja MZ, Ziade MF, Rajab M, El Tayara K, Lonnqvist PA. Varying anatomical injection points within the thoracic paravertebral space: effect on spread of solution and nerve blockade. Anaesthesia. 2004;59:459-63. 5. Kaya FN, Turker G, Mogol E, Bayraktar, S. Thoracic Paravertebral Block for Video-Assisted Thoracoscopic Surgery: Single Injection Versus Multiple Injections. J Cardioth Vasc Anesth 2012;1:90-4. 6, Kotemane NC, Gopinath N, Vaja R. Analgesic techniques fol- lowing thoracic surgery: A survey of United Kingdom practice. Eur J Anaesthesiol 2010;27:897-9. MINERVA ANESTESIOLOGICA 37 ABSTRACT The tranverse abdominis plabe block. Beyond pain outcomes J.P. Cata MD1 and Rodolfo Gebhardt MD2 of Anesthesiology and Perioperative Medicine 2Department of Pain Medicine. The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center. Houston, Texas. USA. 1Department The transversus abdominis plane (TAP) block is a novel regional anesthesia technique that has become more commonly used in the last decade. It consists of the deposit of local anesthetics and/or analgesic adjuvants between the fascial plane along the internal oblique and the transversus abdominis muscles. Spinal nerves from T7 to T12, the ilioinguinal nerve and iliohypogastric nerves, and the lateral cutaneous branches of the dorsal rami of L1-3 provide nerve supply to the antero-lateral abdominal wall. These nerves run between those muscles, hence the anesthetic blockade at this level can be used to provide intraoperative and postoperative analgesia for a wide variety of abdominal surgeries that produce abdominal wall pain.1, 2 There are several techniques to perform a TAP block, however, we can classify them into 3 main groups: the originally described “blind” technique; an “open” technique, usually performed by surgeons, and the “ultrasound” guided technique.3 Ultrasonographyguided TAP blocks are easy to perform and allow the clinician to quickly identify relevant structures and visualize the injectate spread. TAP blocks can be performed as a single injection, or catheters can be placed in order to continuously infuse local anesthetic solutions. TAP blocks have been performed in a wide variety of patients including pediatrics, pregnant women, elders and critically ill patients.4, 5 Most reports have shown that the block is safe when performed in experienced hands; however liver lacerations have been described even when ultrasound was used to guide the needle placement.6, 7 One clinical concern mainly after bilateral TAP blocks is systemic toxicity of local anesthetics. Two recent studies indicate that bilateral TAP blocks may be associated with high to near toxic systemic concentrations of local anesthetics in about a third of the patients.8, 9 Two means to reduce local anesthetic toxicity is to decrease the volume or the concentration of the injected solution. Remarkably, a randomized-controlled trial demonstrated that the use of 0.25% of ropivacaine was associated with similar postoperative outcomes to those obtained after the administration of a solution of 0.5% of the same local anesthetic. Thus, suggesting that the risk of 38 systemic toxicity could be decreased if lower concentrations of local anesthetics are administered.10 The clinical efficacy of this technique compared to placebo has been proved in two recent metaanalysis; however, some studies have shown no beneficial effects.4, 11-15 For instance, the TAP block failed to be superior to placebo when it was added to a multimodal approach of postoperative pain management after abdominal surgery. It is important to consider that some of these controversial findings may be related to variables such as type of abdominal incision (vertical versus transverse), length of the incision (i.e. small laparoscopic versus open laparotomy), obesity, type of technique and the co-administration of long acting opioids neuraxially.12, 14, 16 In women undergoing C-section, the addition of a TAP block to a multimodal analgesic approach that does not include intrathecal morphine has shown to reduce opioid consumption and pain intensity. These beneficial effects associated to the block are lost when morphine is added spinally.4 Some studies may have failed to prove a significant improvement in pain control or analgesic consumption because of the type of technique used to perform the blockade. This is an important consideration because recent studies demonstrate that kinetics of the local anesthetics administered to perform the block are complex due to at least 2 reasons. First, there is no communication between the upper and lower TAP compartments and second, due to the fact that the spread of the anesthetic is not uniform within each compartment.17, 18 This emphasizes the need of performing single injections to access each compartment to obtain a complete abdominal wall block. This may also explain why the use of a catheter is not always associated with significant pain relief. The literature is limited in terms of studies that have compared TAP blocks against other analgesia techniques. A very small retrospective study demonstrates that for abdominal surgery the use of continuous analgesia through a TAP block is associated with a higher consumption of fentanyl compared to epidural analgesia, however, patient satisfaction was not different.19 Two more recent studies demonstrate that the use of a TAP block was associated with worse pain scores and higher opioid consumption compared to intrathecal morphine when used to provide postoperative analgesia for C-section.20, 21 Similar results were reported by McMorrow et al who did not find a beneficial effect of adding a TAP block to intrathecal mor- MINERVA ANESTESIOLOGICA March 2013 ABSTRACT phine in patients who underwent C-section. Interestingly, pruritus and postoperative nausea and vomiting were more common in those patients who received spinal morphine but patient satisfaction scores were comparable in all groups.21, 22 The TAP block has also been compared to local anesthetic infiltration of the trocar insertion wound for laparoscopic surgery. Interestingly, no differences were found between both techniques in terms of analgesic consumption and pain scores.23 In children, TAP block was inferior to ilioinguinal block to provide adequate analgesia after abdominal surgery.24 Most of the clinical studies have investigated the clinical effects of the TAP block with regards to postoperative pain levels and analgesic consumption. Unfortunately, no clinical studies have investigated the effects of the TAP block on the cardiovascular, immunological or gastrointestinal systems. One study demonstrated that the TAP block preserved the respiratory function thus it can be used in patients with poor respiratory reserve who undergo abdominal surgery.25 It can be inferred from the clinical studies on postoperative pain that the TAP block may improve some gastrointestinal outcomes or partially ameliorate the stress response only when compared to intravenous opioid analgesic techniques but not when compared to other regional anesthesia techniques such as neuraxial analgesia. It is important to note that this last technique appears to be associated with more nausea and vomiting than the TAP block. The TAP block may also be preferred in patients in which systemic hypotension is to be avoided. More randomized controlled trials specifically comparing the TAP block against other regional anesthesia techniques are needed to validate its clinical indication. References 1. Mukhtar K, Singh S Ultrasound-guided transversus abdominis plane block. Br J Anaesth 2009;103:900; author reply 900-1. 2. Mukhtar K, Singh S. Transversus abdominis plane block for laparoscopic surgery. Br J Anaesth 2009;102:143-4. 3. Brady RR, Ventham NT, Roberts DM, Graham C, Daniel T. Open transversus abdominis plane block and analgesic requirements in patients following right hemicolectomy. Ann R Coll Surg Engl 2012;94:327-30. 4. Abdallah FW, Halpern SH, Margarido CB. Transversus abdominis plane block for postoperative analgesia after Caesarean delivery performed under spinal anaesthesia? A systematic review and meta-analysis. Br J Anaesth 2012;109: 679-87. 5. Mai CL, Young MJ, Quraishi SA. Clinical implications of the transversus abdominis plane block in pediatric anesthesia. Paediatr Anaesth 2012;22:831-40. 6. Farooq M, Carey M. A case of liver trauma with a blunt regional anesthesia needle while performing transversus ab- Vol. 79 - Suppl. 1 to No. 3 dominis plane block. Reg Anesth Pain Med 2008;33:2745. 7. Lancaster P, Chadwick M. Liver trauma secondary to ultrasound-guided transversus abdominis plane block. Br J Anaesth 2010;104:509-10. 8. Torup H, Mitchell AU, Breindahl T, Hansen EG, Rosenberg J, Moller AM. Potentially toxic concentrations in blood of total ropivacaine after bilateral transversus abdominis plane blocks; a pharmacokinetic study. Eur J Anaesthesiol 2012; 29:235-8. 9. Kato N, Fujiwara Y, Harato M, Kurokawa S, Shibata Y, Harada J et al. Serum concentration of lidocaine after transversus abdominis plane block. J Anesth 2009;23:298300. 10. De Oliveira GS, Jr., Fitzgerald PC, Marcus RJ, Ahmad S, McCarthy RJ. A dose-ranging study of the effect of transversus abdominis block on postoperative quality of recovery and analgesia after outpatient laparoscopy. Anesth Analg 2011;113:1218-25. 11. Freir NM, Murphy C, Mugawar M, Linnane A, Cunningham AJ. Transversus abdominis plane block for analgesia in renal transplantation: a randomized controlled trial. Anesth Analg 2012;115:953-7. 12. Kane SM, Garcia-Tomas V, Alejandro-Rodriguez M, Astley B, Pollard RR. Randomized trial of transversus abdominis plane block at total laparoscopic hysterectomy: effect of regional analgesia on quality of recovery. Am J Obstet Gynecol 2012;207:419 e 411-5. 13. Johns N, O’Neill S, Ventham NT, Barron F, Brady RR, Daniel T Clinical effectiveness of transversus abdominis plane (TAP) block in abdominal surgery: a systematic review and meta-analysis. Colorectal Dis 2012;14:e635-42. 14. Mishriky BM, George RB, Habib AS. Transversus abdominis plane block for analgesia after Cesarean delivery: a systematic review and meta-analysis. Can J Anaesth 2012; 59:766-78. 15. Charlton S, Cyna AM, Middleton P, Griffiths JD. Perioperative transversus abdominis plane (TAP) blocks for analgesia after abdominal surgery. Cochrane Database Syst Rev 2010: CD007705. 16. Griffiths JD, Middle JV, Barron FA, Grant SJ, Popham PA, Royse CF. Transversus abdominis plane block does not provide additional benefit to multimodal analgesia in gynecological cancer surgery. Anesth Analg 2010;111:797801. 17. Borglum J, Jensen K, Christensen AF, Hoegberg LC, Johansen SS, Lonnqvist PA et al. Distribution patterns, dermatomal anesthesia, and ropivacaine serum concentrations after bilateral dual transversus abdominis plane block. Reg Anesth Pain Med 2012;37:294-301. 18. Latzke D, Marhofer P, Kettner SC, Koppatz K, Turnheim K, Lackner E et al. Pharmacokinetics of the local anesthetic ropivacaine after transversus abdominis plane block in healthy volunteers. European journal of clinical pharmacology 2012;68:419-25. 19. Kadam VR, Moran JL. Epidural infusions versus transversus abdominis plane (TAP) block infusions: retrospective study. J Anesth 2011;25:786-7. 20. Loane H, Preston R, Douglas MJ, Massey S, Papsdorf M, Tyler J. A randomized controlled trial comparing intrathecal morphine with transversus abdominis plane block for post-cesarean delivery analgesia. Int J Obstet Anesth 2012; 21:112-8. 21. Kanazi GE, Aouad MT, Abdallah FW, Khatib MI, Adham AM, Harfoush DW et al. The analgesic efficacy of subarachnoid morphine in comparison with ultrasound-guided transversus abdominis plane block after cesarean delivery: a randomized controlled trial. Anesth Analg 2010;111:47581. MINERVA ANESTESIOLOGICA 39 ABSTRACT 22. McMorrow RC, Ni Mhuircheartaigh RJ, Ahmed KA, Aslani A, Ng SC, Conrick-Martin I et al. Comparison of transversus abdominis plane block vs spinal morphine for pain relief after Caesarean section. Br J Anaesth 2011;106: 706-12. 23. Ortiz J, Suliburk JW, Wu K, Bailard NS, Mason C, Minard CG et al. Bilateral transversus abdominis plane block does not decrease postoperative pain after laparoscopic cholecystectomy when compared with local anesthetic infiltration of trocar insertion sites. Reg Anesth Pain Med 2012;37:18892. 24. Fredrickson MJ, Paine C, Hamill J Improved analgesia with the ilioinguinal block compared to the transversus abdominis plane block after pediatric inguinal surgery: a prospective randomized trial. Paediatr Anaesth 2010;20: 1022-7. 25. Petersen M, Elers J, Borglum J, Belhage B, Mortensen J, Maschmann C. Is pulmonary function affected by bilateral dual transversus abdominis plane block? A randomized, placebo-controlled, double-blind, crossover pilot study in healthy male volunteers. Reg Anesth Pain Med 2011;36: 568-71. Is there an alternative to epidural blocks? Intra wound infusion P. Lavand’homme MD, PhD Professor, Department of Anesthesiology, Université Catholique de Louvain, St Luc Hospital UCL Medical School, Brussels, Belgium Despite the availability of various analgesic drugs and techniques, to alleviate acute postoperative pain and specifically movement-associated pain still remains a challenge in some 30% of the patients.1 Poorly relieved acute pain influences the quality of postoperative recovery, it not only impairs rehabilitation and may prolong hospital stay but also reduces patient’s satisfaction and in fine may lead to poor outcome like persistent pain.2 Going “back to the periphery” i.e. intrawound analgesia is a natural evolution of the modern perioperative pain management which goes along with improved perioperative efficiency and fast-track surgery.3 Beside its simplicity and safety aspects, there is also a strong scientific rationale for intra-wound analgesia, supported by the pathophysiology of incisional pain. In postoperative pain, peripheral sensitization processes play a major role and nociceptive inputs originating from the wound are involved in both the initiation and the maintenance of pain.4 Further studies have also highlighted the importance of deep tissue nociceptors in the processes of sensitization after incision. The aforementioned findings argue for a continuous wound infiltration of analgesics deeply into the surgical wound to ensure the success of the technique. 40 Loco-regional analgesic techniques have always been part of multimodal “opioid-sparing” (also called balanced) analgesia, the corner stone of current perioperative pain management. In this regard, all regional techniques including continuous intrawound infusions provide statistically superior analgesia compared with systemic opioids.5 The use of regional analgesia also allows an opioidsparing effect which helps to improve the quality of recovery by reducing well-known opioid-related side effects like nausea, sedation, urinary retension. Although epidural analgesia has been considered for many years as the gold standard for pain relief after major procedures, its popularity is now waning for different reasons.6 Today, around 30% of the patients are ineligible for a thoracic epidural analgesia (refusal, anticoagulation treatment). Whether severe neurological complications are fortunately very rare, the rate of epidural failure may be as high as 28-32%. The development of minimally invasive surgery and the inclusion of the patients in fast-track programmes also promote the use of alternative, less invasive and safer analgesic techniques. Moreover the aforementioned reasons, the immediate benefits observed with epidural blocks are short-lasting as the technique only provides superior analgesia to intravenous opioids during the first postoperative day.5 A better pain relief with epidural analgesia is generally observed for movement-evoked pain and only when a local anesthetic but not an opioid alone is administered.5 Beyonds, there is actually a lack of evidence in favor of epidural analgesia as objective data supporting an improved quality of rehabilitation, a greater patient’s satisfaction or long-term benefits like a reduction of the risk for persistent pain 7 have rarely been assessed. Finally, the economic conjuncture pushes the caregivers also to face the cost-effectiveness of their therapeutic choices. In a recent publication,8 costs of continuous wound infiltration compared favorably (drug treatments, man power) with intravenous opioids and particularly with epidural analgesia after open abdominal surgery. Consequently, it is necessary to question the place of such an invasive technique in the context of modern postoperative analgesia. Several clinical studies have demonstrated the effectiveness of continuous wound infusions in term of postoperative analgesia and opioid-sparing effect. So, deep wound infiltrations (e.g. preperitoneal infusion after open colectomy,9 inter-parietal muscles after open nephrectomy,10 sub-fascial in- MINERVA ANESTESIOLOGICA March 2013 ABSTRACT fusion after cesarean section 11) are able to afford a comfortable postoperative recovery with high patient’s satisfaction in many surgical procedures where epidural analgesia has been used for many years. However, it is worth noting that studies providing a direct comparison between epidural technique and deep continuous wound infiltration are scarce. A single study has compared lumbar epidural analgesia with incisional analgesia after cesarean delivery, showing the superiority of epidural ropivacaine administration only for the first 6 hours.11 An other study (not double-blinded) in the same setting has reported the superiority of ropivacaine wound infiltration over epidural morphine in term of analgesia, side effects and shorter hospital stay.12 It is evident that ethical concerns do exist regarding the use of a placebo epidural technique, particularly at thoracic level. In the context of thoracic surgery, continuous wound infiltration has often been compared with paravertebral block. The paravertebral block knows a regain of interest thanks to the development of ultrasound techniques and seems to represent a current valuable alternative to the thoracic epidural analgesia. Whether for breast surgery,13 continuous wound infiltration is as effective, in more invasive procedures i.e. in the cases of thoracotomy, the continuous paravertebral block clearly demonstrates greater efficacy.14 In summary, the last years have bring more studies involving continuous wound infiltrations for various surgical procedures, helping to better define its place among the loco-regional analgesic techniques. In majority, these studies have only assessed short-term outcomes, mainly immediate postoperative analgesia as it is the case for other loco-regional techniques including epidural blocks. Nevertheless, as modern analgesia also evoluates toward the individualization of treatments, further studies are mandatory to find out for whom less invasive intra-wound infiltration would provide the best outcome and thereby, who should still benefit of an invasive technique like epidural analgesia. References 1. Fletcher D, Fermanian C, Mardaye A, Aegerter P. A patient-based national survey on postoperative pain management in France reveals significant achievements and persistent challenges. Pain 2008;137:441-51. 2. White PF, Kehlet H. Improving postoperative pain management: what are the unresolved issues? Anesthesiology 2010;112:220-5. 3. Kehlet H, Liu SS. Continuous local anesthetic wound infusion to improve postoperative outcome: back to the periphery? Anesthesiology 2007;107:369-71. 4. Brennan TJ. Pathophysiology of postoperative pain. Pain 2011;152:S33-40. Vol. 79 - Suppl. 1 to No. 3 5. Liu SS, Wu CL. The effect of analgesic technique on postoperative patient-reported outcomes including analgesia: a systematic review. Anesth Analg 2007;105:789-808. 6. Rawal N. Epidural technique for postoperative pain: gold standard no more? Reg Anesth Pain Med 2012;37:310-7. 7. Andreae MH, Andreae DA: Local anaesthetics and regional anaesthesia for preventing chronic pain after surgery. Cochrane Database Syst Rev 2012;10:CD007105. 8. Tilleul P, Aissou M, Bocquet F, Thiriat N, le Grelle O, Burke MJ, Hutton J, Beaussier M. Cost-effectiveness analysis comparing epidural, patient-controlled intravenous morphine, and continuous wound infiltration for postoperative pain management after open abdominal surgery. Br J Anaesth 2012;108:998-1005. 9. Beaussier M, El’Ayoubi H, Schiffer E, Rollin M, Parc Y, Mazoit JX, Azizi L, Gervaz P, Rohr S, Biermann C et al. Continuous preperitoneal infusion of ropivacaine provides effective analgesia and accelerates recovery after colorectal surgery: a randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled study. Anesthesiology 2007;107:461-8. 10. Forastiere E, Sofra M, Giannarelli D, Fabrizi L, Simone G. Effectiveness of continuous wound infusion of 0.5% ropivacaine by On-Q pain relief system for postoperative pain management after open nephrectomy. Br J Anaesth 2008; 101:841-7. 11. Ranta PO, Ala-Kokko TI, Kukkonen JE, Ohtonen PP, Raudaskoski TH, Reponen PK, Rawal N. Incisional and epidural analgesia after caesarean delivery: a prospective, placebo-controlled, randomised clinical study. Int J Obstet Anesth 2006;15:189-94. 12. O’Neill P, Duarte F, Ribeiro I, Centeno MJ, Moreira J. Ropivacaine continuous wound infusion versus epidural morphine for postoperative analgesia after cesarean delivery: a randomized controlled trial. Anesth Analg 2012; 114:179-85. 13. Sidiropoulou T, Buonomo O, Fabbi E, Silvi MB, Kostopanagiotou G, Sabato AF, Dauri M. A prospective comparison of continuous wound infiltration with ropivacaine versus single-injection paravertebral block after modified radical mastectomy. Anesth Analg 2008;106:997-1001, table of contents. 14. Fortier S, Hanna HA, Bernard A, Girard C. Comparison between systemic analgesia, continuous wound catheter analgesia and continuous thoracic paravertebral block: a randomised, controlled trial of postthoracotomy pain management. Eur J Anaesthesiol 2012;29:524-30. Pain: friend or foe? A neurobiological perspective Fernando Cervero Anaesthesia Research Unit (Faculty of Medicine), Faculty of Dentistry and The Alan Edwards Centre for Research on Pain, McGill University Montreal, Quebec, Canada Pain is a protective sensation, a useful component of our sensory repertoire, an alarm signal that warns us of impending damage and a friend that helps us to go through life reasonably unscathed. But pain can also be a curse, an unnecessary evil, a burden to our families and a foe that reduces our existence to a depressing survival and challenges the dignity of our lives. MINERVA ANESTESIOLOGICA 41 ABSTRACT The line that separates pain as a friend from pain as a foe is a very tenuous one. It is related to the time course and intensity of the pain, to chronification, to the underlying cause of the pain and to the social and economic factors that impinge on our own ability to endure and fight the pain. Mechanistically, the systems that mediate good pain and bad pain are often the same, with bad pain being the result of such mechanisms being triggered inappropriately, by irrelevant stimuli or with a time course and intensity disproportionate to the originating cause. In some cases, bad pain is just pain without an apparent cause. We know a great deal about the neurobiological mechanisms that mediate good pain. Noxious stimuli activate specific nociceptors in the periphery which in turn stimulate discrete systems in the spinal cord and brain leading to the perception of pain as well as the triggering of motor and autonomic reflexes that remove us from the damage and help us to heal. If the stimuli are intense or prolonged, the system is sensitized and remains in an enhanced state of excitability that cause hyperalgesia. Hyperalgesic states contribute to the protective function of pain by reducing the mobility and function of an injured body part until healing is completed. The injury-induced inflammation that accompanies the hyperalgesic state contributes to the recovery process and to the restoration of function. We are also beginning to know more about the mechanisms of bad pain. Often they are linked to dysfunction or disease of the nervous system, either of the peripheral nerves or of the CNS itself. What we see are abnormal expressions of existing normal mechanisms, triggered inappropriately or with an exaggerated intensity or a prolonged time course. When the normal relationship between injury and pain is broken then the bad pain begins. This lack of correlation between injury and pain makes neuropathic pain particularly difficult to treat and greatly distresses the patients who cannot understand the reason for their excruciating pain. An example of the reversal of a normal pain control system into a pain enhancement process is the mechanism of touch-evoked pain, a symptom commonly observed in hyperalgesic states induced by either chronic inflammation or neuropathy. Normally, activity in large, myelinated A-fibers inhibits nociceptive primary afferent inputs to the spinal dorsal horn. The physiological substrate for this mechanism is primary afferent depolarization (PAD) a GABA mediated inhibitory process. Ho- 42 wever, in inflamed and neuropathic conditions PAD might be enhanced such that it now leads to excessive depolarization of A∂- and C-fibers above their thresholds for action potential generation. This activation produce a novel A input to the nociceptive channel which it has been hypothesized to be a potential mechanism for touch-evoked pain in inflammatory and neuropathic conditions. In addition, a large proportion of the GABA mediated inhibition is via a postsynaptic action on spinal cord neurons. Thus, another important site where reversal of GABA function can have a dramatic impact is on the postsynaptic action of GABA on dorsal horn neurons. Indeed, disinhibition of local dorsal horn circuits can unmask polysynaptic inputs (normally repressed by local inhibitory neurons) from low threshold afferents to nociceptive pathways. Furthermore, the conversion of GABA/ glycine mediated transmission into net excitation may, itself, provide a direct excitatory link from low threshold input to nociceptive neurons. These are examples from recent neurobiological research, of the way in which nociceptive mechanisms in the brain and spinal cord that normally control and reduce pain can be altered to such an extent that the relationship between injury and pain is lost and the same system changes so that innocuous stimuli now cause pain. Thus, the protective feature of pain is lost and the resulting sensation becomes a useless curse that burdens the patient and is irrelevant to the healing process. Our challenge is to understand these mechanisms to the point where we can reverse them therapeutically and restore the friendly and protective qualities of normal pain sensation. Medical publishing in pain: future directions Marc A. Huntoon, M.D. Professor of Anesthesiology Vanderbilt University Nashville TN, USA. Introduction. In many ways, we have more information being published about pain and its treatment than ever before. In the basic sciences, the proliferation of animal models has produced genetic “knockouts” where specific genotypes can be bred and the effects of phenotypical changes can be examined in well-designed experiments. Unfortunately, despite the large number of positive studies featuring candidate MINERVA ANESTESIOLOGICA March 2013 ABSTRACT therapies that work very well in animals, the true breakthroughs occurring in the field are nominal. Spontaneous pain is understudied as compared to evoked or inflammatory states, and the complex interaction of comorbid problems is not appreciated.1 The practicing pain clinician is often left bereft of any reasonable therapies for chronic pain produced by surgery, cancer therapies, or as sequelae of chronic disease. As a practicing pain clinician and educator, it is now a part of every day that one has to tell a student or resident that we have completed the care algorithm and tell the patient that “we have nothing left to offer you”, or fight with an insurer/payor about whether to provide an expensive therapy for the patient as a “last resort”. During these times, some pain journals have opted for “guideline warfare” with the use of print for large treatises about a drug, procedure, or surgery that they are at least partially biased towards based on their specialty of origin, academic standing, or other factors.2 Pharmaceutical and device industry representatives also have biases, and often contractually control the data from the research they have underwritten. Study data may or may not be published in entirety, depending on how favorable or unfavorable said results are to their product. Opioid use in the United States and increasingly other areas of the world has exploded in popularity for treatment of chronic pain despite essentially no evidence showing efficacy. Increasingly though, there may be no other affordable options. It is against this backdrop that the Editors-In-Chiefs (EICs) and their Editorial Boards must wield their power and (hopefully) integrity to publish quality science. In no particular order, the following trends and topics in the field of pain medicine are where I think we will be focusing over the next decade or so. Neural Imaging and Mapping of Cortical Responses to Treatment Pain is in the brain. We have some evidence that one can control the activation of certain areas of the brain involved in pain perception, e.g. the prefrontal cortex, through biofeedback.3 The number of studies supporting the use of cognitive behavioral functional restoration programs is increasing quickly. These programs work on the pieces of the pain puzzle that purely nociceptive therapies do not. They meet patients at their point of need in the middle of their dysfunctional lives, depressions and drug-infatuations and teach them how to live Vol. 79 - Suppl. 1 to No. 3 with their chronic diseases.4 Potentially, through the development of cortical maps using fMRI, we can see the specific effects produced by such varied therapies as sensorimotor retraining, centrally- acting pharmacotherapies, and stimulation produced analgesia.5 Bedside Diagnosis Imaging as an extension of the physical exam is already occurring to some extent with the use of ultrasound. As the software becomes more and more sophisticated, the ability to produce bedside diagnoses may rival the information that can be obtained from fixed scanners such as MRI or CT scanners. In some cases, bedside US may be better than other imaging modalities because of artifacts produced by the appliance.6 New Devices at the Neural Interface There are a number of novel devices for the treatment of pain that are on the near horizon. These include stimulators that can be placed very near the dorsal root ganglion.7 Studies suggest that the technique is technically facile, that it may compare very favorably if not better than spinal cord stimulation, and might be a therapeutic breakthrough for difficult to target areas such as the foot and groin. Future large scale non-inferiority trials compared to conventional spinal cord stimulation devices and potentially randomized controlled trials are possible. High frequency stimulation of the spinal cord, and new devices to treat peripheral nerves at the nerve-device interface are also being developed.8 The possibility of combination therapies utilizing pharmacologic priming to enhance response to stimulation is becoming a reality.9 Transparency, Fraud, Plagiarism, Conflicts-of Interest and other Ethical Issues A recent survey of 183 medical editors-in-chiefs was performed, showing that their level of familiarity and competence in dealing with publication ethics topics was poor.10 Major cases of fraud and fabrication of data by “accomplished researchers” has rocked the scientific community and major EICs.11, 12 Conclusion Much progress has been made in pain research and treatment despite multiple distractions. The future should help us bring relief to our patients. That is, if we can keep or heads in the game and act responsibly. MINERVA ANESTESIOLOGICA 43 ABSTRACT References 1. Mogil JS. Animal models of pain: progress and challenges. Nature Reviews Neuroscience 2009;10:283-94. 2. Chou R, Atlas SJ, Loeser JD, Rosenquist RW, Stanos SP. Guideline warfare over interventional therapies for low back pain: Can we raise the level of discourse? J Pain 2011;12:833-9. 3. deCharms RC, Maeda F, Glover GH, Ludlow D, Pauly JM , Soneji D, Gabrieli JDE, Mackey SC. Control over brain activation and pain learned by using real-time functional MRI. Proc Nat Acad Sciences 2005;102:18626-31. 4. Gillanders, D.T., Ferreira, N.B., Bose, S. and Esrich, T. The relationship between acceptance, catastrophizing and illness representations in chronic pain. European Journal of Pain. 2012;doi: 10.1002/j.1532-2149.2012.00248.x 5. Jensen KB, Berna C, Loggia ML, Wasan AD, Edwards RR, Gollub RL.The use of functional neuroimaging to evaluate psychological and other non-pharmacological treatments for clinical pain. Neuroscience Letters 2012;520:156-64. 6. Long SS, Surrey D, Nazarian LN. Common sonographic findings in the painful hip after total hip arthroplasty. J Ultrasound in Medicine 2012;31:301-12. 7. Deer TR, Grigsby E, Weiner RL, Wilcosky B, Kramer JM. A prospective study of dorsal root ganglion stimulation for the relief of chronic pain. Neuromodulation 2012; e-pub ahead of print. DOI: 10.1111/ner.12013. 8. http://www.neurosmedical.com/ Accessed December 16, 2012. 9. Schectman G, Lind G, Winter J, Meyerson BA, Linderoth B. Intrathecal Clonidine and Baclofen Enhance the PainRelieving Effect of Spinal Cord Stimulation: A Comparative Placebo-Controlled, Randomized Trial. Neurosurgery 2010;67:173-81. 10. Wong VSS, Callaham ML. Medical journal editors lacked familiarity with scientific publication issues despite training and regular exposure. J Clinical Epidemiology 2012;65:247-52. 11. Shafer S. Shadow of doubt. Anesth Analg 2011;112:498500. 12. Eisenach JC. Data fabrication and article retraction. How not to get lost in the woods. Anesthesiology 2009;110:9556. Ultrasound for chronic pain intervention: a new era? Philip Peng Anesthesia Chronic Pain Program, Toronto Western Hospital, University of Toronto, Canada In general, interventional pain procedures can be performed with or without image guidance. The use of imaging equipment enhances safety and accuracy of the procedure as well as patient’s comfort. Traditionally, imaging equipment refers to fluoroscopy and computed tomography (CT). Because of the cost, risk of radiation and requirement of infrastructure, the image-guided techniques are not widely adopted in most of the pain procedures except those injections in axial structures. Ultrasound imaging allows visualization of 44 the target structures and real-time guidance for injection. This also offers multiple advantages over fluoroscopy or CT because of its affordability, portability, absence of radiation, and independence of infrastructure of facilities. Their emerging popularity is evidenced by an upsurging of publications and workshops in this field.1 Ultrasound for pain intervention can be divided according to the targets: (1) peripheral; (2) axial; and (3) musculoskeletal structures.2 The cervical sympathetic trunk (CST) block, commonly described as stellate ganglion block, is conventionally performed with landmark-based or fluoroscopy-guided technique. The targets are either the anterior tubercle or transverse process at C6-7 level. However, the CST is defined by the fascial plane (prevertebral fascia) and ultrasound, not fluoroscopy, can visualize. The needle is inserted between the trachea and carotid artery. Recent literature suggested a high prevalence of presence of esophagus and vessels in this region.3, 4 Ultrasound imaging allows the visualization and avoidance of this important structures and enables a ‘lateral’ approach to the CST.4 Large randomized controlled trial is required to confirm the safety, accuracy and outcome over the conventional technique. The standard practice for lumbar medial branch block is by fluoroscopy-guidance as the target is bone structure. Ultrasound-guided technique has been validated and compared with fluoroscopy-guided injection. The accuracy was approximately 90-95% 5 but success rate fell to an unacceptable 62% 6 in patients with BMI greater than 30 kgm-2. Thus, ultrasound technique should be restricted as an alterative to fluoroscopy technique in patient with low BMI. In contrast, ultrasound-guided technique showed promising result in cervical medial branch block especially for the third occipital nerve.7 Contrast to the lumbar region, obesity is less contributory to the cervical region. The use of ultrasound-guided injection for musculoskeletal structures is a well-accepted practice and the interest is still growing. Literature is robust in supporting the superiority of accuracy with ultrasound-guided technique, irrespective of the experience and confidence factor of the practitioner.8-10 Accurate injection results in better outcome.10, 11 The target is defined by soft tissue (e.g. subacromial bursa, peritendinous injection) and ultrasound is definitely superior to fluoroscopy in those targets. It is not that difficult to comprehend MINERVA ANESTESIOLOGICA March 2013 ABSTRACT the superior accuracy with ultrasound-guided technique when one considers how narrow the target is in glenohumeral joint from a posterior approach perspective and the slender fascial plane of the subdeltoid subacromial bursa.10 In conclusion, ultrasound for pain medicine (USPM) for peripheral structures is definitely promising but more outcomes studies are required. The quality of the target visualization limits the clinical application of USPM for axial structures but newer techniques such as fusion scan (combining CT or Magnetic Resonance Image pictures with ultrasonographic image), target-directing system or “GPS” system, and real-time 3-dimension scan can potentially enhance the accuracy and reliability of the USPM technique. The use of USPM is musculoskeletal structures is well supported by evidence. It is a matter of time to make this as a popular technique among practitioners. Is ultrasound for chronic pain intervention a new era? It is just the beginning. References 1. Peng P, Narouze S. Ultrasound-guided interventional procedures in pain Medicine: A review of anatomy, sonoanaotmy and procedures. Part I: Non-axial structures. Reg Anesth Pain Med 2009;34:458-74. 2. Peng PWH. In: Peng PWH (ed). Ultrasound for Pain Medicine Intervention: A Practical Guide. Volume 1. Peripheral Structures. Peng’s Education Series. iBook, Apple Inc. California, US. (released in Feb 2013). 3. Siegenthaler A, Mlekusch S, Schliessbach J, Curatolo M, Eichenberger U. Ultrasound Imaging to Estimate Risk of Esophageal and Vascular Puncture After Conventional Stellate Ganglion Block. Reg Anesth Pain Med 2012;37:224-7. 4. Bhatia A, Flamer D, Peng P. Evaluation of sonoanatomy relevant to the performance and safety in stellate ganglion block in 100 subjects Can J Anesth 2012;59:1040-7. 5. Narouze S, Peng PWH. Ultrasound-guided interventional procedures in pain medicine: A review of anatomy, sonoanaotmy and procedures. Part II: axial structures. Reg Anesth Pain Med 2010;35 386-96. 6. Rauch S, Kasuya Y, Turan A, Neamtu A, Vinayakan A, Sessler D. Ultrasound-guided lumbar medial branch block in obese patients: a fluoroscopically confirmed clinical feasibility study. Reg Anesth Pain Med 2009;34;340-2. 7. Siegenthaler A, Mlekusch S, Trelle S, Schliessbach J, Curatolo M, Eichenberger U. Accuracy of ultrasound guided nerve blocks of the cervical zygapophysial joints. Anesthesiology 2012;117:347-52. 8. Daley El, Bajaj S, Bisson LJ, Cole BJ. Improving injection accuracy of the elbow, knee, and shoulder. Does injection site and imaging make a difference? A systematic review. Am J Sports Med 2011;39:656-62. 9. Berkoff DJ, Miller LE, Block JE. Clinical utility of ultrasound guidance for intra-articular knee injections: a review. Clin Interv Aging 2012:789-95. 10. Peng PWH, Cheng P. Ultrasound-guided interventional procedures in pain Medicine: A review of anatomy, sonoanaotmy and procedures. Part III: Shoulder. Reg Anesth Pain Med 2011;36:592-605. Vol. 79 - Suppl. 1 to No. 3 11. Sibbitt WL Jr, Kettwich LG, Band PA, Chavez-Chiang NR, DeLea SL, Haseler LJ, Bankhurst AD. Does ultrasound guidance improve the outcomes of arthrocentesis and corticosteroid injection of the knee? Scand J Rheumatol 2012; 41:66-72. Altered central pain processing: current status of translational research Michele Curatolo University of Bern, Switzerland. Introduction It is well known that pain signals from damaged tissues undergo central modulation, leading to enhancement or attenuation of pain (Woolf, 2011). Following extensive animal research, several clinical studies have detected changes in the central processing of the sensory input in patients with pain syndromes. In particular, central hypersensitivity has been an almost consistent finding, possible causes being an amplification of central nociceptive processes and / or an imbalance in the endogenous inhibitory mechanisms (Curatolo, 2011). While this research has greatly improved our understanding of the pathophysiology of pain, attempts to translate the current knowledge into benefits for patients are almost at its birth. In this respect, questions that concern the domains of diagnosis, prognosis and treatment need to be addressed. Can we diagnose altered central pain processing? Past research has consistently demonstrated that groups of patients differ from groups of healthy controls in terms of sensitivity of the central nervous system to nociceptive and non-nociceptive stimuli (Curatolo et al., 2006). The fact that hypersensitivity is observed after stimulation of tissues that are not injured is strongly suggestive of a widespread alteration of central pain processes. However, this observation should not lead to the conclusion that all pain patients have such a widespread central alteration. Indeed, the interindividual variability is typically high and data of patients overlap with data of healthy controls. This means that the magnitude of widespread hypersensitivity is greatly variable, and probably not all patients display this phenomenon. These considerations clearly show the importance of being able to assess these pathophysiologi- MINERVA ANESTESIOLOGICA 45 ABSTRACT cal changes individually, which, in clinical terms, implies diagnosing a pathological condition. Different measures of central excitability in humans are available, known as quantitative sensory tests (QST). QST involve the application of stimuli and the recordings of responses. Examples of responses are pain intensity, pain thresholds and electrophysiological measures, such as evoked potentials or reflex responses. Altered reactions after stimulation of non injured tissues are suggestive for altered processes within the central nervous system. Endogenous inhibitory control can be assessed by conditioned pain modulation (CPM), whereby pain to a test stimulus is attenuated by a concomitant painful conditioning stimulus (Pud et al., 2009). For any test to be diagnostic, different criteria have to be fulfilled, the most important ones being reliability, availability of reference values and validity. Several reliability studies on QST have been performed. Most of them have shown good reliability (Chesterton et al., 2007; Biurrun Manresa et al., 2011; May et al., 2012). However, the majority of studies have been performed in healthy volunteers, and the measurements have been repeated only few days apart. More data in pain patients are needed and the long-term reliability has still to be assessed. Furthermore, reliability studies on more recent models, such as methods for CPM, are lacking. Normative values are becoming available for a variety of assessments, particularly in the fields of neuropathic and musculoskeletal pain (Rolke et al., 2006; Neziri et al., 2010; Neziri et al., 2011). Construct validity is typically estimated by evaluating the performance of a diagnostic test against a reference standard. In the case of central pain processes, no widely accepted reference standard is available, as such an assessment should explore directly the excitability of central neural structures. In the absence of data on construct validity, the clinical use of QST is based on face validity. An example of face validity is the assumption that electromyographic recordings of the lower limb after electrical stimulation (nociceptive reflex) assess spinal excitability; this is supported by the consideration that a voluntary muscle contraction can be ruled out if the latency between stimulus and contraction is below a certain cutoff. Does altered central pain processing predict poor outcome? In the field of prognosis, a relevant hypothesis is that patients who display central hyperexcitabi- 46 lity or impaired endogenous modulation would be more prone to poor outcome. This hypothesis has been confirmed in studies on whiplash injury, which have shown persistence of pain and disability in the group of patients who had displayed sensory hypersensitivity soon after the trauma (Sterling et al., 2003; Sterling, 2010). Accordingly, impaired CPM before surgery was a predictor of chronic post-thoracotomy pain (Yarnitsky et al., 2008). These findings were not confirmed by a recent pilot study that analyzed patients during the chronic phase of low back or neck pain: no significant associations between assessments of altered central pain processes and clinical outcomes at 1215 months follow-up were found (Mlekusch et al., in press). More studies are needed to establish the prognostic value of different assessments of altered pain processing. The selection of the tests can be supported by a recent study that ranked the pain models according to their ability to discriminate between patients and pain-free subjects (Neziri et al., 2012). Positive findings of prognostic studies would allow the identification of patients at risk who may undergo preventive strategies or would be enrolled in intervention studies. Does altered central pain processing predict the efficacy of treatments? If alterations in central pain processing are relevant for the determination of symptoms, their treatment is expected to lead to clinical benefits. An essential translational question is how to tailor treatments to the individual pathophysiology. Ideally, a specific alteration would be treated by an intervention that would act on that alteration, thereby leading to clinical improvement. Research in this field is still sparse. In a preliminary analysis of a randomized controlled study on patients with neck pain after whiplash injury, the presence of both widespread mechanical and cold hyperalgesia was associated with poor efficacy of a rehabilitation programme (Jull et al., 2007). In a recent study, alteration of CPM was a predictor of efficacy of the antidepressant duloxetine in diabetic polyneuropathy (Yarnitsky et al., 2012). These preliminary data offer the perspective of stratifying patients according to possible mechanisms underlying their pain syndrome, and improve our instruments to select treatments that are most likely to be effective. Definitely, the available data MINERVA ANESTESIOLOGICA March 2013 ABSTRACT are insufficient in this respect. Large trials that analyze not only statistical associations, but also quantify the predictive value of the tests are essential to establish the clinical applicability of this concept. ative pain: pre-operative DNIC testing identifies patients at risk. Pain 2008;138:22-8. 17. Yarnitsky D, Granot M, Nahman-Averbuch H, Khamaisi M, Granovsky Y. Conditioned pain modulation predicts duloxetine efficacy in painful diabetic neuropathy. Pain 2012;153:1193-8. References 1. Biurrun Manresa JA, Neziri AY, Curatolo M, ArendtNielsen L, Andersen OK. Test-retest reliability of the nociceptive withdrawal reflex and electrical pain thresholds in chronic pain patients. Eur J Appl Physiol 2011;111:8392. 2. Chesterton LS, Sim J, Wright CC, Foster NE. Interrater reliability of algometry in measuring pressure pain thresholds in healthy humans, using multiple raters. Clin J Pain 2007;23:760-6. 3. Curatolo M. Diagnosis of altered central pain processing. Spine 2011;36:S200-4. 4. Curatolo M, Arendt-Nielsen L, Petersen-Felix S. Central hypersensitivity in chronic pain: mechanisms and clinical implications. Phys Med Rehabil Clin N Am 2006;17:287302. 5. Jull G, Sterling M, Kenardy J, Beller E. Does the presence of sensory hypersensitivity influence outcomes of physical rehabilitation for chronic whiplash? A preliminary RCT. Pain 2007;129:28-34. 6. Mlekusch S, Schliessbach J, Camara RJA, Arendt-Nielsen L, Jüni P, Curatolo M. Do Central Hypersensitivity and Altered Pain Modulation Predict the Course of Chronic Low Back and Neck Pain? Clin J Pain (in press). 7. May A, Rodriguez-Raecke R, Schulte A, Ihle K, Breimhorst M, Birklein F, Jurgens TP. Within-session sensitization and between-session habituation: A robust physiological response to repetitive painful heat stimulation. Eur J Pain 2012;16:409-10. 8. Neziri AY, Andersen OK, Petersen-Felix S, Radanov B, Dickenson AH, Scaramozzino P, Arendt-Nielsen L, Curatolo M. The nociceptive withdrawal reflex: Normative values of thresholds and reflex receptive fields. Eur J Pain 2010;14:134-41. 9. Neziri AY, Curatolo M, Limacher A, Nuesch E, Radanov B, Andersen OK, Arendt-Nielsen L, Juni P. Ranking of parameters of pain hypersensitivity according to their discriminative ability in chronic low back pain. Pain 2012;153:2083-91. 10. Neziri AY, Scaramozzino P, Andersen OK, Dickenson AH, Arendt Nielsen L, Curatolo M. Reference Values of Mechanical and Thermal Pain Tests in a Pain-Free Population. Eur J Pain 2011;15:376-83. 11. Pud D, Granovsky Y, Yarnitsky D. The methodology of experimentally induced diffuse noxious inhibitory control (DNIC)-like effect in humans. Pain 2009;144:16-9. 12. Rolke R, Baron R, Maier C, Tolle TR, Treede RD, Beyer A, Binder A et al. Quantitative sensory testing in the German Research Network on Neuropathic Pain (DFNS): Standardized protocol and reference values. Pain 2006;123:23143. 13. Sterling M. Differential development of sensory hypersensitivity and a measure of spinal cord hyperexcitability following whiplash injury. Pain 2010;150:501-6. 14. Sterling M, Jull G, Vicenzino B, Kenardy J. Sensory hypersensitivity occurs soon after whiplash injury and is associated with poor recovery. Pain 2003;104:509-17. 15. Woolf CJ. Central sensitization: implications for the diagnosis and treatment of pain. Pain 2011;152:S2-15. 16. Yarnitsky D, Crispel Y, Eisenberg E, Granovsky Y, BenNun A, Sprecher E et al. Prediction of chronic post-oper- Vol. 79 - Suppl. 1 to No. 3 An injectable nano-delivery platform for the sustained release of lidocaine Sm Khaled1, Iman K. Yazdi1,2, Jeff Van Eps1,3, Nima Taghipour1, Jonathan Martinez1, Joseph Fernandez-Moure1,3, Seth Haddix1, Bradley Weiner4 and Ennio Tasciotti1 1Department of Nanomedicine, The Methodist Hospital Research Institute, Houston, TX, USA 2Department of Biomedical Engineering, University of Houston, Houston, TX, USA 3Department of Surgery, The Methodist Hospital, Houston, TX, USA 4Department of Orthopedic Surgery, The Methodist Hospital, Houston, TX, USA Background and aims Non-opioid drug therapies are lacking in their availability and efficacy to treat chronic radicular or acute incisional (post-operative) pain, and the subsequent reliance on opioid drugs for analgesia has several consequences, including but not limited to: addiction, GI dysmotility and socioeconomic loss. Providing adequate non-opioid anesthesia in these clinical scenarios hinges upon prolonged nerve blockade via long-term bioavailability of anesthetics. Aside from infusions via an indwelling catheter, most currently available approaches for prolonged anesthetic action provide no longer than 1-2 days of blockade. To overcome this limitation of locally acting drugs in pain management, it is essential to develop methods of prolonging their efficacy. Recent advances in nanotechnology place nano-inspired biomaterials at the forefront of potential pathways to address the existing shortcomings of pain management. The aim of this study is to evaluate the ability of a nanoscale delivery system to provide greatly prolonged, sustained release of lidocaine compared to the current standard of care. Methods Poly(lactic-co-glycolic acid) (PLGA) microspheres, a widely studied delivery carrier for pain medication, has been modified in this study with nanostructured silica enclosure (Si) in order to prolong the release of anesthetic. Si loaded with lidocaine hydrochloride was embedded in PLGA MINERVA ANESTESIOLOGICA 47 ABSTRACT 100 Percent Mass Release 80 60 40 20 0 0 1 2 3 Time (day) 4 5 Figure 1.—(a) Si; (b) PLGA-Si; (c) Fluorescent micrograph of PLGA-Si in pluronic gel and (d) SEM micrograph of PLGA-Si in Pluronic gel (arrow heads showing the existence of PLGA-Si microspheres in gel matrix) and (e) Release profile of lidocaine hydrochloride from different nanocomposite formulations over five days. microspheres having two different formulations (50/50 and 85/15) using solid-oil-water emulsion technique. PLGA microspheres containing 5 wt% of Si (PLGA-Si 5%) were mixed in an aqueous solution of 20% Pluronic F-127 at 4 ºC. For release study, the polymer solution containing the loaded PLGA-Si were injected in 48-well plates and left at 37 ºC for one minute for complete gelation of Pluronic. The pharmacokinetics of the composite was performed using phosphate buffet saline (PBS) as a release media under mild agitation at 37 ºC. Samples of the release were collected at 6, 12 and 24 h, 2, 4, and 7 day time points. The amount of lidocaine in PBS samples was quantified using HPLC technique. As controls, lidocaine-loaded pristine PLGA and Si were used separately as well as embedded in the gel in this study. Results The silica nanoparticles were characterized by SEM as shown in Figure 1a. Fluorescently labeled silica nanoparticles integrated in the PLGA microspheres and the composite microspheres embedded in pluronic gel were evaluated using fluorescent microscopy as shown in Figure 1b and c. The gel matrix containing the composite microspheres was also analyzed by SEM 48 (Figure 1d). The release profile of lidocaine hydrochloride from control PLGA microspheres and Si embedded in the gel showed faster release compared to PLGA-Si composite microspheres integrated in the gel (Figure 1 e). Control PLGA(85/15 and 50/50 comonomer ratio)-gel and Si-gel demonstrated 25-40 and 100% release of lidocaine respectively within two days while the PLGA50/50-Si and PLGA 85/15-Si embedded in the gel released 10-20% of total drug content within the same time frame. Moreover, higher comonomer ratio (lactic to glycolic) of PLGA used in the preparation of composite microspheres delayed the release amount by approximately 10% over five days. Conclusions We have tangibly demonstrated the capability to provide sustained release of the local anesthetic lidocaine via a novel nano-delivery platform. This biodegradable PLGA-Si system provides a promising new alternative for the delivery of local anesthetic in vitro, and demonstrates the potential to produce prolonged nerve blockade for the management of acute and chronic pain in vivo. This in vivo testing is currently being undertaken in our lab and has great potential implications for translational MINERVA ANESTESIOLOGICA March 2013 ABSTRACT application in the clinical realm of anesthesia and surgery. Success in this realm could significantly decrease the large burden of opioid analgesics currently existing in the medical community, and society at large. Postoperative latent pain sensitisation: can we prevent acute pain to become chronic? Margarita M Puig, MD, PhD Professor of Anaesthesiology and Pain Management, Department of Anaesthesiology, Hospital del Mar, Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona, Spain Preventing the transition from acute to chronic pain is one of the main goals in pain medicine, but efforts have been mostly unsuccessful. In surgical patients, acute postoperative pain is followed by persistent pain in 10%–50% of patients after usual procedures.1 There is evidence supporting the association of female sex, older age, previous exposure to opioids, high (pre and post-operative) pain intensity, and pre-injury anxiety or depression, with persistent pain outcomes, although some risk factors have been demonstrated only in certain types of surgeries.2, 3 The recognition that acute post-operative pain may became chronic in predisposed individuals, is under active investigation both in preclinical models 4 and humans. Acute and chronic pains have different mechanisms and the transition from acute to chronic involves, among other issues, peripheral and central pain sensitisation (changes in neuronal plasticity), enhanced descending facilitation from the rostral ventromedial medulla (RVM) to the spinal cord, and early glial cell activation with increased circulating pro-inflammatory cytokines.5 In a mouse model of post-surgical pain we have shown that remifentanil based anaesthesia enhances and extends postoperative pain sensitization.4, 6-8 We have also reported that animals previously injured or exposed to opioids present long-lasting pain vulnerability shown by increased susceptibility to develop hyperalgesia in response to new stimuli or opioid administration.6 This phenomenon is known as latent pain sensitization,9 and may reflect the transition from acute to chronic pain. In our model, latent pain sensitisation can be evidenced by the naloxone test in which the abrupt blockade of opioid receptors precipitates hyperalgesia. The Vol. 79 - Suppl. 1 to No. 3 effect is stereospecific, centrally originated, and involves the dynorphin / kappa opioid receptor system. The blockade of nor-binaltorphimineinduced hyperalgesia by MK-801, also suggests that NMDA receptors are implicated. Thus surgery induces latent, long-lasting changes in the processing of nociceptive information that can be exposed by non-nociceptive detrimental stimuli such as the administration of opioid antagonists.10 Among the multiple possible mechanism implicated in pain hypersensitivity, spinal cord (SC) and dorsal root ganglia (DRG) glial cell activation has been consistently reported after inflammation, nerve injury 11 and/or opioid exposure.12 However, up to date, glial contribution to postoperative latent pain sensitization is unknown. In the mice model of post operative pain, we are investigating adaptative transformations in glial cells (SC and DRG) after surgery performed under remifentanil anaesthesia. Preliminary results show long-lasting, latent, morphological changes in glial cells that involve opioid and toll-like receptors, that might play an important role in the development of latent pain sensitization in mice. These results could contribute to establish future cellular and anatomical targets to prevent the development of latent pain sensitization after surgery, and the transformation of acute into chronic pains. References 1. Kehlet H, Jensen TS, Woolf CJ. Persistent Postsurgical Pain: Risk Factors and Prevention. Lancet 2006;367:161825. 2. Shipton EA. The transition from acute to chronic post surgical pain. Anesth Intensive Care 2011;39;824-36. 3. Lavand’homme P. The progression from acute to chronic pain. Curr Opin Anaesthesiol 2011;24:545-50. 4. Romero A, Rojas S, Cabañero D, Gispert JD, Herance JR, Campillo A et al. A 18F-fluorodeoxyglucose MicroPET imaging study to assess changes in brain glucose metabolism in a rat model of surgery-induced latent pain sensitization. Anesthesiplogy 2011;115;1072-83. 5. Wang CK, Myunghae JH, Ian C. Factors Contributing to Pain Chronicity. Curr Pain Headache Rep 2009;13:7-11. 6. Cabañero, D, Campillo A, Célérier E, Romero, A, Puig MM. Pronociceptive effects of remifentanil in a mouse model of postsurgical pain: effect of a second surgery. Anesthesiology 2009;111;1334-45. 7. Cabañero, D, Célérier, E, Garcia-Nogales P, Mata M, Roques BP, Maldonado R et al The pro-nociceptive effects of remifentanil or surgical injury in mice are associated with a decrease in delta-opioid receptor mRNA levels: Prevention of the nociceptive response by on-site delivery of enkephalins. Pain 2009;141:88-96. 8. Campillo, A, Gonzalez-Cuello, A, Cabañero, D, GarciaNogales P, Romero A, Milanes MV et al. Increased spinal dynorphin levels and phospho-extracellular signal-regulated kinases 1 and 2 and c-Fos immunoreactivity after MINERVA ANESTESIOLOGICA 49 ABSTRACT surgery under remifentanil anesthesia in mice. Mol Pharmacol 2010;77:185-94. 9. Rivat C, Laboureyras E, Laulin, JP, Le Roy C, Richebe P, Simonnet G. Non-nociceptive environmental stress induces hyperalgesia, not analgesia, in pain and opioid-experienced rats. Neuropsychopharmacology 2007;32:221728. 10. Campillo A, Cabañero D, Romero A, García-Nogales P, Puig MM. Delayed postoperative latent pain sensitization revealed by the systemic administration of opioid antagonists in mice. Eur J Pharmacol 2011;657(1):89-96. 11. Peters CM, Eisenach JC, Contribution of the chemokine (C-C motif ) ligand 2 (CCL2) to mechanical hypersensitivity after surgical incision in rats. Anesthesiology 2010;112: 1250-8. 12. Horvath RJ, Landry RP, Romero-Sandoval EA, DeLeo JA. Morphine tolerance attenuates the resolution of postoperative pain and enhances spinal microglial p38 and extracellular receptor kinase phosphorylation. Neuroscience 2010;25:843-54. 13. Berta T, Liu T, Liu YC, Xu ZZ, Ji RR. Acute morphine activates satellite glial cells and up-regulates IL-1beta in dorsal root ganglia in mice via matrix metalloprotease-9. Mol. Pain 22, 2012;8:18. How can we prolong at-home postoperative regional analgesia? Edward R. Mariano, MD, MAS (Clinical Research) Department of Anesthesia, VA Palo Alto Health Care System, Palo Alto, CA, USA; and Stanford University School of Medicine, Stanford, CA, USA Regional anesthesia offers patients many potential advantages in the immediate postoperative period such as decreased pain, nausea and vomiting, and time spent in the postanesthesia care unit (PACU).1, 2 However, these beneficial effects are time-limited and do not last beyond the duration of the block.2 While the clinical effects of peripheral nerve blocks typically last long enough for patients to meet discharge eligibility from PACU and avoid hospitalization for pain control,3 these results can be easily negated if patients’ pain or opioid-related side effects warrant a return trip to the hospital and readmission following block resolution.4 Thus, investigators have sought to extend block duration to provide longer-term, site-specific analgesia for patients on an ambulatory basis. Continuous Peripheral Nerve Blocks Continuous peripheral nerve block (CPNB) techniques (also known as perineural catheters) permit delivery of local anesthetic solutions to the site of a peripheral nerve on an ongoing basis.5 Portable infusion devices can deliver local anesthetic for days after surgery with actual duration 50 depending on the reservoir volume and infusion settings.6, 7 In a recent meta-analysis comparing CPNB to single-injection peripheral nerve blocks, CPNB results in lower patient-reported worst pain scores and pain scores at rest on postoperative day (POD) 0, 1, and 2; by POD 3, pain outcomes appear similar.8 Patients who received CPNB also experienced less nausea, consumed less opioids, slept better, and rated their satisfaction with pain management higher during their infusions.8 Managing CPNB patients at home takes a hands-on approach, and not all patients are good candidates for outpatient perineural infusion.7 Patients must have a reliable means of followup, and they should have a caretaker at home for at least the first night after surgery.7 A health care provider must be available at all times to manage common issues associated with CPNB and call patients once daily to assess for analgesic efficacy and side effects.9 Patients, especially those undergoing lower extremity surgery, and their caretakers should receive clear instructions regarding the care of their infusion device and catheter as well as their anesthetized extremities. Typical local anesthetic infusion doses in femoral or lumbar plexus catheters produce clinically-significant quadriceps weakness.10, 11 An association between femoral perineural catheter infusions and patient falls has been identified, which raises an important safety risk especially for outpatients.12, 13 Although the optimal duration for CPNB is unknown, 2 to 7 days has been reported for orthopedic inpatients14 with durations as long as 34 days at a United States military hospital.15 At the completion of the local anesthetic infusion, perineural catheters must be removed. According to a survey of ambulatory CPNB patients, 98% are comfortable removing their own CPNB catheters at home, but 4% would have preferred that a provider perform the removal.9 Despite more than a decade of published data supporting CPNB for extending the duration of postoperative pain control, adoption of these techniques is not universal. Many of the issues are arguably system-based, and the lack of a separate regional anesthesia induction room (“block” room) 16 or time pressure 17 may be responsible. However, lack of training in these techniques may also be a factor 18 or negative experiences with failed placement attempts using traditional techniques.19 MINERVA ANESTESIOLOGICA March 2013 ABSTRACT Adjuvants to Local Anesthetic Solutions for SingleInjection Peripheral Nerve Blocks Long-acting local anesthetics (e.g., bupivacaine, levobupivacaine, and ropivacaine) generally provide analgesia of similar duration 20-22 for 24 hours or less. 20,23 Several different drugs have been investigated for their potential to extend single-injection peripheral nerve block duration when added to local anesthetic solutions. Epinephrine when added to local anesthetic solutions provides vasoconstriction to decrease uptake but has little or no clinical effect on the duration of longer-acting local anesthetics.24 Opioids in general likely do not provide additional benefits in terms of duration, 25 with the possible exception of buprenorphine, 26 and exposes patients to potential opioid-related side effects. To date, there are insufficient data to support the addition of tramadol or neostigmine to local anesthetic solutions. 25 Of the available adjuvants, clonidine has been demonstrated in clinical studies and systematic reviews to extend the duration of analgesia for intermediate-acting local anesthetics (e.g., mepivacaine) with few side effects in doses up to 150 mcg but may not have an effect on long-acting local anesthetics.25, 27 There has been increasing interest in dexamethasone as an adjuvant to local anesthetic solutions based on clinical reports of extended duration when added to intermediate-acting local anesthetics. 28, 29 This effect may be less pronounced with long-acting local anesthetics, with one study demonstrating average durations of 22 hours when dexamethasone is added to either ropivacaine or bupivacaine.30 Caution is warranted when experimenting with adjuvants that have not been specifically approved for peripheral nerve block indications (i.e., “off-label” use) as many of the usual safeguards have not been performed, and these drugs may have additive effects on local anesthetic-induced neurotoxicity.31 Novel Extended-Duration Local Anesthetics There has been interest in liposomal formulations of extended-release bupivacaine for regional anesthesia for over two decades.32, 33 A recent formulation consisting of bupivacaine encapsulated in multivesicular liposomes to produce slow release is approved by the United States Food and Drug Administration for local infiltration but not yet for regional anesthesia.34 Vol. 79 - Suppl. 1 to No. 3 Initial nerve block studies in animals suggest a lower maximum serum concentration with the liposomal formulation compared to plain bupivacaine 35 unless co-administered with lidocaine which facilitates release of liposomal bupivacaine, 36 and epidural administration in human volunteers more than doubles duration of sensory block with a shorter duration of motor block. 37 Additional studies are underway to further explore the efficacy and safety of this drug for regional anesthesia. In summary, there are currently few options to extend the duration of regional analgesia at home beyond the one day expected from most single-injection nerve blocks. CPNB with local anesthetic perineural infusion is an effective method to provide acute postoperative pain control for up to several days after surgery, but training in insertion techniques and a system to manage CPNB patients on an outpatient basis are necessary. Adjuvants or liposomal formulations of local anesthetics offer potential options for extended-duration pain control, but further research regarding efficacy and safety for regional anesthesia indications is necessary. References 1. Liu SS, Strodtbeck WM, Richman JM, Wu CL. A comparison of regional versus general anesthesia for ambulatory anesthesia: a meta-analysis of randomized controlled trials. Anesth Analg 2005;101:1634-42. 2. McCartney CJ, Brull R, Chan VW, Katz J, Abbas S, Graham B et al. Early but no long-term benefit of regional compared with general anesthesia for ambulatory hand surgery. Anesthesiology 2004;101:461-7. 3. Williams BA, Kentor ML, Vogt MT, Williams JP, Chelly JE, Valalik S, Harner CD, Fu FH. Femoral-sciatic nerve blocks for complex outpatient knee surgery are associated with less postoperative pain before same-day discharge: a review of 1,200 consecutive cases from the period 1996-1999. Anesthesiology 2003;98:1206-13. 4. Williams BA, Kentor ML, Vogt MT, Vogt WB, Coley KC, Williams JP, Roberts MS, Chelly JE, Harner CD, Fu FH. Economics of nerve block pain management after anterior cruciate ligament reconstruction: potential hospital cost savings via associated postanesthesia care unit bypass and same-day discharge. Anesthesiology 2004;100:697-706. 5. Ilfeld BM. Continuous peripheral nerve blocks: a review of the published evidence. Anesth Analg 2011;113:90425. 6. Ilfeld BM. Continuous peripheral nerve blocks in the hospital and at home. Anesthesiol Clin 2011;29:193211. 7. Ilfeld BM, Enneking FK. Continuous peripheral nerve blocks at home: a review. Anesth Analg 2005;100:182233. 8. Bingham AE, Fu R, Horn JL, Abrahams MS. Continuous peripheral nerve block compared with single- MINERVA ANESTESIOLOGICA 51 ABSTRACT injection peripheral nerve block: a systematic review and meta-analysis of randomized controlled trials. Reg Anesth Pain Med 2012;37:583-94. 9. Ilfeld BM, Esener DE, Morey TE, Enneking FK. Ambulatory perineural infusion: the patients’ perspective. Reg Anesth Pain Med 2003;28:418-23. 10. Charous MT, Madison SJ, Suresh PJ, Sandhu NS, Loland VJ, Mariano ER, Donohue MC, Dutton PH, Ferguson EJ, Ilfeld BM. Continuous femoral nerve blocks: varying local anesthetic delivery method (bolus versus basal) to minimize quadriceps motor block while maintaining sensory block. Anesthesiology 2011;115:774-81. 11. Ilfeld BM, Moeller LK, Mariano ER, Loland VJ, Stevens-Lapsley JE, Fleisher AS, Girard PJ, Donohue MC, Ferguson EJ, Ball ST. Continuous peripheral nerve blocks: is local anesthetic dose the only factor, or do concentration and volume influence infusion effects as well? Anesthesiology 2010;112:347-54. 12. Feibel RJ, Dervin GF, Kim PR, Beaule PE. Major complications associated with femoral nerve catheters for knee arthroplasty: a word of caution. J Arthroplasty 2009;24: 132-7. 13. Ilfeld BM, Duke KB, Donohue MC. The association between lower extremity continuous peripheral nerve blocks and patient falls after knee and hip arthroplasty. Anesth Analg 2010; 111: 1552-4 14. Capdevila X, Pirat P, Bringuier S, Gaertner E, Singelyn F, Bernard N, Choquet O, Bouaziz H, Bonnet F. Continuous peripheral nerve blocks in hospital wards after orthopedic surgery: a multicenter prospective analysis of the quality of postoperative analgesia and complications in 1,416 patients. Anesthesiology 2005;103:1035-45. 15. Stojadinovic A, Auton A, Peoples GE, McKnight GM, Shields C, Croll SM, Bleckner LL, Winkley J, Maniscalco-Theberge ME, Buckenmaier CC 3rd. Responding to challenges in modern combat casualty care: innovative use of advanced regional anesthesia. Pain Med 2006;7:330-8. 16. Mariano ER, Chu LF, Peinado CR, Mazzei WJ. Anesthesia-controlled time and turnover time for ambulatory upper extremity surgery performed with regional versus general anesthesia. J Clin Anesth 2009;21:253-7. 17. Oldman M, McCartney CJ, Leung A, Rawson R, Perlas A, Gadsden J, Chan VW. A survey of orthopedic surgeons’ attitudes and knowledge regarding regional anesthesia. Anesth Analg 2004;98:1486-90, table of contents. 18. Hadzic A, Vloka JD, Kuroda MM, Koorn R, Birnbach DJ. The practice of peripheral nerve blocks in the United States: a national survey [p2e comments]. Reg Anesth Pain Med 1998;23:241-6. 19. Salinas FV. Location, location, location: Continuous peripheral nerve blocks and stimulating catheters. Reg Anesth Pain Med 2003;28:79-82. 20. Casati A, Borghi B, Fanelli G, Cerchierini E, Santorsola R, Sassoli V, Grispigni C, Torri G. A double-blinded, randomized comparison of either 0.5% levobupivacaine or 0.5% ropivacaine for sciatic nerve block. Anesth Analg 2002;94:987-90, table of contents. 21. Hickey R, Hoffman J, Ramamurthy S. A comparison of ropivacaine 0.5% and bupivacaine 0.5% for brachial plexus block. Anesthesiology 1991;74:639-42. 22. Klein SM, Greengrass RA, Steele SM, D’Ercole FJ, Speer KP, Gleason DH, DeLong ER, Warner DS. A comparison of 0.5% bupivacaine, 0.5% ropivacaine, 52 and 0.75% ropivacaine for interscalene brachial plexus block. Anesth Analg 1998;87:1316-9. 23. Fanelli G, Casati A, Beccaria P, Aldegheri G, Berti M, Tarantino F, Torri G. A double-blind comparison of ropivacaine, bupivacaine, and mepivacaine during sciatic and femoral nerve blockade. Anesth Analg 1998;87:597-600. 24. Weber A, Fournier R, Van Gessel E, Riand N, Gamulin Z. Epinephrine does not prolong the analgesia of 20 mL ropivacaine 0.5% or 0.2% in a femoral three-in-one block. Anesth Analg 2001;93:1327-31. 25. Murphy DB, McCartney CJ, Chan VW. Novel analgesic adjuncts for brachial plexus block: a systematic review. Anesth Analg 2000;90:1122-8. 26. Candido KD, Franco CD, Khan MA, Winnie AP, Raja DS. Buprenorphine added to the local anesthetic for brachial plexus block to provide postoperative analgesia in outpatients. Reg Anesth Pain Med 2001;26:352-6. 27. McCartney CJ, Duggan E, Apatu E. Should we add clonidine to local anesthetic for peripheral nerve blockade? A qualitative systematic review of the literature. Reg Anesth Pain Med 2007;32:330-8. 28. Movafegh A, Razazian M, Hajimaohamadi F, Meysamie A. Dexamethasone added to lidocaine prolongs axillary brachial plexus blockade. Anesth Analg 2006;102:263-7. 29. Parrington SJ, O’Donnell D, Chan VW, Brown-Shreves D, Subramanyam R, Qu M, Brull R. Dexamethasone added to mepivacaine prolongs the duration of analgesia after supraclavicular brachial plexus blockade. Reg Anesth Pain Med 2010;35:422-6. 30. Cummings KC, Napierkowski DE, Parra-Sanchez I, Kurz A, Dalton JE, Brems JJ, Sessler DI. Effect of dexamethasone on the duration of interscalene nerve blocks with ropivacaine or bupivacaine. Br J Anaesth 2011;107:446-53. 31. Williams BA, Hough KA, Tsui BY, Ibinson JW, Gold MS, Gebhart GF. Neurotoxicity of adjuvants used in perineural anesthesia and analgesia in comparison with ropivacaine. Reg Anesth Pain Med 2011;36:225-30. 32. Boogaerts J, Lafont N, Donnay M, Luo H, Legros FJ. Motor blockade and absence of local nerve toxicity induced by liposomal bupivacaine injected into the brachial plexus of rabbits. Acta Anaesthesiol Belg 1995;46:19-24. 33. Boogaerts JG, Lafont ND, Declercq AG, Luo HC, Gravet ET, Bianchi JA, Legros FJ. Epidural administration of liposome-associated bupivacaine for the management of postsurgical pain: a first study. J Clin Anesth 1994;6:315-20. 34. Chahar P, Cummings KC. Liposomal bupivacaine: a review of a new bupivacaine formulation. J Pain Res 2012;5:257-64. 35. Richard BM, Newton P, Ott LR, Haan D, Brubaker AN, Cole PI, Ross PE, Rebelatto MC, Nelson KG. The Safety of EXPAREL (R) (Bupivacaine Liposome Injectable Suspension) Administered by Peripheral Nerve Block in Rabbits and Dogs. J Drug Deliv 2012;2012:962101. 36. Richard BM, Rickert DE, Doolittle D, Mize A, Liu J, Lawson CF. Pharmacokinetic Compatibility Study of Lidocaine with EXPAREL in Yucatan Miniature Pigs. ISRN Pharm 2011;2011:582351. 37. Viscusi ER, Candiotti KA, Onel E, Morren M, Ludbrook GL. The pharmacokinetics and pharmacodynamics of liposome bupivacaine administered via a single epidural injection to healthy volunteers. Reg Anesth Pain Med 2012;37: 616-22. MINERVA ANESTESIOLOGICA March 2013 ABSTRACT Mechanisms of chronification of acute into chronic pain Mark A. Schumacher Ph.D., M.D. UCSF School of Medicine and medical Center, San Francisco, USA. The development of chronic pain following an acute injury, whether by unexpected trauma or following a planned operative procedure, remains a medical and scientific enigma. On the one hand, we may consider that the human nervous system was fundamentally ill prepared to function normally following acute painful events of extraordinary magnitude. Beyond signaling recognition of impending or real tissue injury, once activated, the pain pathway may in fact be poorly designed to subsequently limit or suspend its activity once the noxious stimulus has been removed. Therefore, from the nervous system’s point of view, routine recovery from a thoracotomy or treatment of invasive cancer may represent an “unexpected” survival. Importantly, despite the advent of anesthetics that render patients insensate during or just following injury, the eventual cessation of the anesthetic action typically unmasks ongoing painful sensations that can last days to weeks. Unfortunately, and as reported by the Institute for Medicine, for many patients the sensation of pain may continue for months to years. Moreover, how can two individuals who sustain the “identical” injury, disease process or operative procedure have dramatically different long-term pain outcomes? In one case, the patient experiences the expected gradual resolution of their pain while the other has pain that fails to resolve and that ultimately degrades their quality of life. Classically, one may consider three predominant modalities that are considered to underlie the chronification of acute to chronic pain. They include 1) Peripheral Sensitization: development of persistent dysfunction of the peripheral nervous system including the dorsal root or trigeminal ganglion often typified by lowering nociceptor activation thresholds or spontaneous activation; 2) Central Sensitization: abnormalities of nociceptive signaling and plasticity in the spinal cord dorsal horn often described as arising from enhanced facilitation of nociceptive neurotransmission and dependent on NMDA mediated signaling; 3) Supraspinal Modulations: alterations in signal Vol. 79 - Suppl. 1 to No. 3 processing above the spinal cord, especially changes in plasticity dedicated to descending inhibition of second-order dorsal horn neurons. Although these three modalities are often represented as distinct neural systems, under closer inspection they rely on a set of overlapping mechanisms that once initiated by injury or disease, drive the transition from acute to chronic pain. Together, these mechanisms may be broadly viewed as abnormalities in injury–induced plasticity involving: Inflammation (eg: excessive cytokine production, sustained production of lipoxygenase products); Post–translational modification (eg: activation of kinases with subsequent modification and activation of nociceptive ion channels); and Transcription – Gene expression (eg: activation or repression of gene promoters within the pain pathway that result in either an overexpression of pain transducing channels and/or a concomitant reduction of negative regulatory elements or channel subunits). In support of such a model, reports linking these mechanisms to Peripheral Sensitization, Central Sensitization and Supraspinal Modulation will be presented. Given its dominant role in regulating cellular plasticity, a special focus on transcriptional mechanisms of nociceptive plasticity will be undertaken. Emerging findings from our laboratory have linked the expression of TRPV1 to the Sp1-like transcription factor family. Subsequent findings support the hypothesis that development of persistent inflammatory hyperalgesia is dependent on one or more members of the Sp1-like transcription factor family. We propose that multiple nociceptive genes are co-regulated by individual transcription factors or a small subset of related transcription factor family members that directs a nociceptive (pain) transcriptome. In turn, we speculate that the emergence of transcription – based therapeutic targeting, such that exists in cancer chemotherapy, could one day be designed to prevent or reverse the deleterious effects of aberrant nociceptive plasticity whether arising from peripheral - central sensitization or descending modulatory pathways. Therefore, future multimodal analgesic therapies designed to abate or reverse the transition from acute to chronic pain, will require the inclusion of compounds that will selectively block nociceptive transcriptional plasticity possibly based on genetic predispositions. MINERVA ANESTESIOLOGICA 53 ABSTRACT Drug-drug combinations in the management of chronic pain Robert B. Raffa, PhD Department of Pharmaceutical Sciences, Temple University School of Pharmacy and Department of Pharmacology, Temple University School of Medicine, Philadelphia, PA (USA) The evolution in understanding pain (patho)physiological processes in recent years has brought into focus the fact that the optimal treatment of pain is achieved only when the mechanism of analgesic effect of the pharmacotherapeutic agent best addresses, that is matches, the physiologic mechanisms that are involved in the initiation and chronification of specific pains. However, many if not most persistent pain syndromes are initiated and maintained by multiple underlying mechanistic processes, including nociception, central sensitization, peripheral sensitization, phenotypic switches, ectopic excitability, structural reorganization, and compromised inhibitory systems. The relative contributions of each of these various mechanisms are time- and intensity-dependent, such that clinical signs such as hypersensitivity, allodynia, and hyperalgesia evolve with pain duration. Primary afferent and sensory neurons play an important role in nociceptive pain processing, as do inflammation, altered sympathetic function, and changes in somatosensory function, neuropathic components, along with psychological factors. And the transition from acute to chronic pain is not thoroughly understood, but it likely involves interaction among the immune, endocrine, and nervous systems. Other factors no doubt play a role. Against this background of complex physiology, it is no surprise that no single mono-mechanistic analgesic agent can universally address multi-mechanistic pain (efficacy and safety). A muti-mechanistic analgesic approach for the management of multimechanistic pain is more likely to provide a superior clinical outcome. This goal might be accomplished by combining two analgesics that work through different mechanisms or by administration of a single agent that works through multiple analgesic mechanisms. Such combination analgesic products are theoretically more effective because they activate multiple pain-inhibitory pathways and offer a broader spectrum of relief. This might include 54 multiple afferents and other transmission pathways as well as multiple processes. Combining two or more agents from different mechanistic classes (e.g., opioid + non-opioid, opioid + acetaminophen (paracetamol), etc.) can result in an additive or even in a synergistic (greater than additive) analgesic effect. The combining of analgesics having different analgesic mechanisms might also allow the use of lower doses of the individual agents, possibly low enough doses to reduce the adverse effects below that expected from the sum of each used alone at the necessitated higher doses. However, not all analgesic combinations are better than treatment with individual agents alone. The combination analgesic effect can be greater than, the same as, or even less than the therapeutic effects of the individual components. Furthermore, the combination adverse effects can be the same as, or even greater than, the adverse effects of the individual components used alone. Therefore, each combination product – and each combination dose ratio – must be rigorously evaluated. Such evaluation is mathematically based on the concept of dose equivalence and the actual (experimental) vs expected effects can be presented in graphical representation (e.g., in an isobologram). The literature provides examples of each of these concepts. Steroid injections in chronic spinal pain: indications, effectiveness, and safety Honorio T. Benzon, MD Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine Chicago, Illinois USA Low back with or without radicular pain is the most common manifestation of back pain. Radicular pain, or radiculitis, is pain along the distribution of the spinal nerve root while radiculopathy implies neurologic conduction loss, i.e. sensory numbness or muscle weakness. The symptoms usually results from compression or irritation of the nerve root from a herniated disc, spinal stenosis, ligamentum flavum cyst or hypertrophy, or other causes.1, 2 Mechanisms involved in the production of pain have been ascribed to the production of prostaglandins and cytokines. It has been postulated that inflammatory changes in the nerve root cause the MINERVA ANESTESIOLOGICA March 2013 ABSTRACT pain,1, 3 and nerve root edema has been demonstrated on CT scans of patients with herniated discs.4 Inflammation, lymphocyte infiltration, and edema were noted on histologic sections of nerve roots biopsied during discectomy.5 Increased levels of inflammatory cytokines interleukin (IL)-6 and IL-8 were noted in disc materials taken from patients with known disc disease.6 Disc herniation results in the release of phospholipase A2 (PLA2) resulting in the production of prostaglandins.7, 8 Elevated levels of leukotriene B4 and thromboxane B2, which are products of PLA2 activity, were noted on biopsies of patients who were operated on for disc herniation.9 The injection of nucleus pulposus in the epidural space of dogs resulted in inflammatory changes in the nerve root.10 Recently, cytokines such as interleukins 1 and 6 (IL-1, IL6) and tumor necrosis factor alpha (TNF-alpha) have been strongly linked to radicular pain.11, 12 IL-1 beta, IL-6, or TNF-alpha have been noted to increase the discharge rates and mechanosensitivity of dorsal root ganglion and peripheral receptive fields in rats.13 It has been noted that discs express tumor necrosis factor-alpha (TNFalpha) which causes morphologic and functional changes when applied to spinal nerve roots.14 Levels of IL-6 in the CSF of patients with radicular pain from spinal stenosis correlated with the degree of spinal stenosis.15 The epidural injection of TNF-alpha inhibitor etanercept has been shown to have salutary effects in patient with herniated disc 16 or spinal stenosis.17 The epidural injection of the anti-IL6 receptor antibody tocilizumab decreased low back pain and numbness in patients with spinal stenosis.18 These results should be contrasted with the findings that intravenous infliximab had similar efficacy as placebo in relieving sciatica from herniated disc.19 While these developments are exciting, issues associated with epidural steroid injections will be discussed. Pain relief from epidural steroids are secondary to their anti-inflammatory (1) and antinociceptive effect. Steroids not only block cytokine synthesis, but also interfere with their activity. Steroids have been shown to suppress spontaneous ectopic neural discharge originating in experimental neuromas and prevent the later development of ectopic impulse discharge in freshly cut nerves.20 The topical application of methylprednisolone was noted to block transmission of C fibers but not the A fibers.21 Vol. 79 - Suppl. 1 to No. 3 There have been several studies on the efficacy of ESIs. Randomized placebo-controlled studies on interlaminar ESIs showed short-term efficacy of the ESIs. One study showed reduction in leg pain at 6 weeks, without functional improvement; the decrease in pain was not significant at 3 months.22 The other study showed better functional improvement in the steroid group at 3 weeks but not at 6 weeks.23 A placebo-controlled study on caudal ESI showed better results in the ESI group at 4 weeks, with no difference at 1 year.24 Epidural steroid injections (ESIs) are given either through the interlaminar (IL) approach or the transforaminal (TF) approach. The rationale for the TF approach is to deposit the steroid along the nerve root, through the intervertebral foramina, and at the lateral and ventral epidural spaces, i.e. at the interspace between the disc and the nerve root. Studies on TF ESI showed either no difference when compared with IL ESI,25-27 or superiority over IL ESI 28-33 and over paravertebral local anesthetic.33 Non-particulate steroids have been recommended to improve safety. A dose-ranging study on lumbar TF epidural dexamethasone showed no differences in efficacy between 4, 8, and 12 mg dexamethasone.34 The effectiveness of cervical TF epidural dexamethasone was slightly less than that of triamcinolone, but the difference was not statistically or clinically significant.35, 36 The safety of fluoroscopically-guided ESIs has been confirmed in a retrospective study, most complications were minor and involved pain and numbness.37 The ASA closed claim study during the years 1970 to 1999 revealed the increasing occurrence reporting of injuries from chronic pain procedures. Of the 5475 claims, ESIs accounted for 83% of the injections and 40% of the claims.38 A follow-up closed claims study for the years 2005-2008 was done for cervical procedures.39 Of the cervical procedures, 59% resulted in spinal cord damage, 31% of which resulted from direct needle trauma. Sedation or general anesthesia was more prevalent in the claims associated with spinal cord injuries. Case reports of CNS injury from TF ESIs are secondary to the proximity of the needle to arteries in cervical TF ESIs 40 and to the steroid’s particle size.41 Methylprednisolone was noted to have the largest particles, triamcinolone was intermediate, betamethasone was the smallest, and dexamethasone non-particulate.41 The increased CNS lesions with methylprednisolone were noted in animal studies.42, 43 Several cases of fungal MINERVA ANESTESIOLOGICA 55 ABSTRACT meningitis occurred recently in the U.S., this resulted from contaminated steroids from a single compounding company. Compounding of steroids is done to eliminate the preservatives in the steroid. However, an 8- 10-fold increase in the concentration of the preservatives is necessary to cause such changes.44 Compounding betamethasone also resulted in an increase in the size and a change of the appearance of the steroid particle. A Working Group of experts and the FDA Safe Use Initiative are working on recommendations to improve the safety of ESIs. References 1. Benzon HT. Epidural steroid injections for low back pain and lumbosacral radiculopathy. Pain 1986;24:277-95. 2. Bogduk N. Clinical Anatomy of the Lumbar Spine and Sacrum. 3rd edn. Edinburgh, Churchill Livingstone, 1997. 3. Kelly M. Is pain due to pressure on nerves? Spinal tumors and the intervertebral disk. Neurology 1956;6:32-6. 4. Takata K, Inoue S, Takashi K et al. Swelling of the cauda equina in patients who have herniation of a lumbar disc: A possible pathogenesis of sciatica. J Bone Joint Surg Am 1988;70:361-8. 5. Lindahl O, Rexed B. Histologic changes in spinal nerve roots of operated cases of sciatica. Acta Orthop Scand 1951; 20:215-25. 6. Burke JG, Watson RW, McCormack D, Dowling FE, Walsh MG, Fitzpatrick JM. Intervertebral discs which cause low back pain secrete high levels of proinflammatory mediators. J Bone Joint Surg Br 2002;84:196-201. 7. Saal JS, Franson RC, Dobrow R et al. High levels of inflammatory phospholipase A2 activity in lumbar disc herniations. Spine 1990;15:674-8. 8. O’Donnell JL, O’Donnell AL: Prostaglandin E2 content in herniated lumbar disc disease. Spine 1996;21:1653-4. 9. Nygaard O, Mellgren S, Osterud B. The inflammatory properties of contained and noncontained lumbar disc herniation. Spine 1997;22:2484-8. 10. McCarron RF, Wimpee MW, Hudkins PG et al. The inflammatory effect of nucleus pulposus: A possible element in the pathogenesis of low-back pain. Spine 1987;12:7604. 11. Ohlmarker K, Larson K. Tumor necrosis factor alpha and nucleus-pulposus-induced nerve root injury. Spine 1998;23:2538-1432. 12. Ito T, Ohtori S, Inoue G et al. Glial phosphorylated p38 MAP kinase mediates pain in a rat model of lumbar disc herniation and induces motor dysfunction in a rat model of lumbar spinal canal stenosis. Spine 2007;32:159-67. 13. Ozaktay AC, Kallakuri T, Takebayashi T et al. Effects of interlekin-1 beta, interleukin-6, and tumor necrosis factor on sensitivity of dorsal root ganglion and peripheral receptive fields of rats. Eur Spine J 2006;15:1529-37. 14. Igarashi T, Kikuchi S, Shubayev V, Myers RR. 2000 Volvo Award winner in basic science studies: Exogenous tumor necrosis factor-alpha mimics nucleus pulposus-induced neuropathology. Molecular, histologic, and behavioral comparisons in rats. Spine 2000;25:2975-80. 15. Ohtori S, Suzuzki M, Koshi T et al. Proinflammatory cytokines in the cerberospinal fluid of patients with lumbar radiculopathy. Eur Spine J 2011;20:942-6. 16. Cohen SP, Bogduk N, Dragovich A et al. Randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled, dose-response, and 56 preclincal safety study of transforaminal epidural etanercept for the treament of sciatica. Anesthesiology 2009;110:1116-26. 17. Ohtori S, Miyagi M, Eguchi Y et al. Epidural administration of spinal nerves with the tumor necrosis factor-alpha inhibitor, etanercept compared with dexamethasone for treatment of sciatica in patients with lumbar spinal stenosis. Spine 2012;37:439-44. 18. Ohtori S, Miyagi M, Eguchi Y et al. Efficacy of epidural administration of anti-interleukin-6 receptor antibody onto spinal nerve for treatment of sciatica. Eur Spine J 2012;21(10):2079-84 Epub 2012 Feb 21. 19. Korhonen T, Karppinen J, Paimela L et al. The treatment of disc-herniation-induced sciatica with infliximab: oneyear follow-up results of FIRST II, a randomized controlled trial. Spine 2006;31:2759-66. 20. Devor M, Govrin-Lippmann R, Raber P. Corticosteroids suppress spontaneous ectopic neural discharge originating in experimental neuromas. Pain 1985;22:127-37. 21. Johansson A, Hao J, Sjolund B. Local corticosteroid application blocks transmission in normal nociceptive C-fibres. Acta Anaesthesiol Scand 1990;34:335-338 22. Carette S, Leclaire R, Marcoux S et al. Epidural corticosteroid injections for sciatica due to herniated nucleus pulposus. N Engl J Med 1997;336:1634-40. 23. Arden NK, Price C, Reading I et al. A multicentre randomized controlled trial of epidural corticosteroid injections for sciatica: the WEST study. Rheumatology 2005;44: 1399-406. 24. Bush K, Hillier S. A controlled study of caudal epidural injections of triamcinolone plus procaine for the management of intractable sciatica. Spine 1991;16:572-5. 25. Rados I, Sakic K, Fingler M et al. Efficacy of interlaminar vs. transforaminal epidural steroid injection for the treatment of chronic unilateral radicular pain: prospective, randomized study. Pain Med 2011;12:1316-21. 26. Smith CC, Booker T, Schaufele MK, Weiss P. Interlaminar versus transforaminal epidural steroid injections for the treatment of symptomatic lumbar spinal stenosis. Pain Med 2010;11:1511-5. 27. Lee JH, Moon J, Lee SH. Comparison of effectiveness according to different approaches of epidural steroid injection in lumbosacral herniated disk and spinal stenosis. J Back Musculoskelet Rehabil 2009;22:83-9. 28. Lee JH, An JH, Lee SH. Comparison of the effectiveness of interlaminar and bilateral transforaminal epidural steroid injections in treatment of patients with lumbosacral disc herniation and spinal stenosis. Clin J Pain 2009;25:20610. 29. Ackerman WE 3rd, Ahmad M. The efficacy of lumbar epidural steroid injections in patients with lumbar disc herniations. Anesth Analg 2007;104:1217-22. 30. Schaufele MK, Hatch L, Jones W. Interlaminar versus transforaminal epidural injections forthe treatment of symptomatic lumbar intervertebral disc herniations. Pain Physician 2006;9:361-6. 31. Kolsi I, Delecrin J, Berthelot JM et al. Efficacy of nerve root versus interspinous injections of glucocorticoids in the treatment of disk-related sciatica. A pilot, prospective, randomized, double-blind study. Joint Bone Spine 2000;67:113-8. 32. Thomas E, Cyteval C, Abiad L et al. Efficacy of transforaminal versus interspinous corticosteroid injection in discal radiculalgia - a prospective, randomised, double-blind study. Clin Rheumatol 2003;22:299-304. 33. Kraemer J, Ludwig J, Bickert U et al. Lumbar epidural perineural injection: a new technique. Eur Spine J 1997;6:357-61. 34. Ahadian FM, McGreevy K, Schulteis G. Lumbar trans- MINERVA ANESTESIOLOGICA March 2013 ABSTRACT foraminal epidural dexamethasone: a prospective, randomized, double-blind, dose-response trial. Reg Anesth Pain Med 2011;36:572-8. 35. Dreyfuss P, Baker R, Bogduk N. Comparative effectivenss of cervical transforaminal injections with particulate and nonparticulate corticosteroid preparations for cervical radicular pain. Pain Med 2006;7:232-7. 36. Lee JW, Park KW, Chung SK et al. Cervical transforaminal epidural steroid injection for the management of cervical radiculopathy: a comparative study of particulate versus non-particulate steroids. Skeletal Radiol 2009;38:107782. 37. McGrath JM, Schaefer MP, Malkamaki DM. Incidence and characteristics of complications from epidural steroid injections. Pain Med 2011;12:726-31. 38. Fitzgibbon DR, Posner KL, Domino KB, Caplan RA, Lee LA, Cheney FW. Chronic pain management: American Society of Anesthesiologists Closed Claims Project. Anesthesiology 2004;100:98-105. 39. Rathmell JP, Michna E, Fitzgibbon DR, Stephens LS, Posner KL, Domino KB. Injury and liability associated with cervical procedures for chronic pain. Anesthesiology 2011; 114:918-26. 40. Huntoon MA. Anatomy of the cervical intervertebral foramina: vulnerable arteries and ischemic neurologic injuries after transforaminal epidural injections. Pain 2005;117:104-11. 41. Benzon HT, Chew TL, McCarthy R et al. Comparison of the particle sizes of different steroids and the effect of dilution: A review of the relative neurotoxicities of the steroids. Anesthesiology 2007;106:331-8. 42. Okubadejo GO, Talcott MR, Schmidet RE et al. Perils of intravascular methylprednisolone injection into the vertebral artery. An animal study. J Bone Joint Surg Am 2008;90:1932-8. 43. Dawley JD, Moeller-Bertram T, Wallace MS, Patel PM. Intra-arterial injecrion in the rat brain. Evaluation of steroids used for transforaminal epidurals. Spine 2009;34:1638-43. 44. Benzon HT, Gissen AJ, Strichartz GR, Avram MJ, Covino BG. The effect of polyethylene glycol on mammalian nerve impulses. Anesth Analg 1987;66:553-9. Possibility of particulated steroids injection for selective root blocks in the cervical and lumbar regions: anatomical study Miguel A. Reina a,b,* , José A. De Andrés c, José M. Hernández a, Andrés López a,b, Manuel Fernández Domínguez b, Alberto Prats-Galino d aDepartment of Anaesthesiology, Madrid-Montepríncipe University Hospital, Madrid, Spain bDepartment of Clinical Medical Sciences and Applied Molecular Medicine Institute, CEU San Pablo University School of Medicine, Madrid, Spain cDepartment of Anaesthesiology, Valencia General University Hospital, Valencia, Spain dLaboratory of Surgical Neuro-Anatomy, Human Anatomy and Embryology Unit, Faculty of Medicine, Universitat de Barcelona, Barcelona, Spain Selective root block by transforaminal approach with radiological control allows selective deposition of an appropriate corticosteroid next to the Vol. 79 - Suppl. 1 to No. 3 Figure 1.—Human in vitro anatomical model at cervical level. Review unintentional possibility of arterial vessel injection closed out sensitive spinal cervical ganglia with different needles. Needles: 22G Quincke needle and 22G Blunt nerve block needles (Epimed International). nerve root. This type of treatment is available since many decades due to medical consensus and good clinical results from open studies, but it has been associated with major neurological complications. These complications have occurred in small percentages, but the problem still continues. Several reports revealed that corticosteroid injections performed at the cervical or lumbar spine could be followed by severe spinal cord ischemic infarction (Brouwers et al., 2001; Hodges et al., 1998; Ludwig and Burns, 2005; Muro et al., 2007; Rozin et al., 2003; Suresh et al, 2007; Houten and Errico, 2002; Quintero et al., 2006; Somayaji et al., 2005; Meyer et al., 2005; Furman et al., 2003), despite the techniques being performed under radiological control, trying to recognize the tip of the needle and any vascular spreading of the solution injected. Consequences were catastrophic, with neurologic sequelae including vertebrobasilar brain infarcts, combined brain/spinal cord infarcts, cervical spinal cord infarcts as well as thalamic, cerebellum, brainstem, or posterior cerebral artery territory infarcts (Malhotra et al., 2009).These patients resulted in tetraplegia or bilateral lower extremity paralysis, with neurogenic bowel and bladder and some cases associated with hemorrhagic complications and hydrocephalus (Ludwig and Burns, 2005; Tiso et MINERVA ANESTESIOLOGICA 57 ABSTRACT Figure 2.—Human in vitro anatomical model at cervical level. Review unintentional possibility of arterial vessel injection closed out sensitive spinal cervical ganglia. Needles: 22G Quincke needle. al, 2004; Ziai et al, 2006; Lyders and Morris, 2009; Houten and Errico, 2002; Kennedy et al , 2009; Scott et al, 2005). Positive blood aspirate to predict intravascular injections was 97.9% specific, but only 44.7% sensitive. This test to predict an intravascular injection is not sensitive, and therefore a negative aspiration is not reliable (Tiso et al, 2004). Magnetic resonance examination, spinal cord arteriography, or pathologic examination suggests that spinal cord and cerebral infarction were of arterial origin. Vasospasm or arterial traumatic dissection might occur, however, the leading hypothesis until now was that inadvertent intra-arterial injection of particulate corticosteroid that creates an embolus causing a distal infarct in the anterior spinal or vertebral arteries territory (Baker et al, 2003; Tiso et al, 2004; Scanlon et al, 2007). Detail of arterial vascularization is necessary to understand the origin of these complications, as well as to know the size of arteries at intervertebral foraminal level and possibility to introduce the tip of needles used. Radicular arteries occupy a medial place inside the intervertebral foramen, close to nerve roots. Some reach the spinal cord and others only the nerve roots. Branches of radicular arteries are vertebral arteries, as well as ascending cervical, deep cervical, ribs, lumbar and ilio-lumbar arteries. Huntoon described the importance of the ascending and deep cervical arteries when performing transforaminal cervical injections due to their criti- 58 Figure 3.—Human in vitro anatomical model at lumbar level. Review unintentional possibility of arterial vessel injection closed out sensitive spinal lumbar ganglia. Needles: 22G Quincke needle. cal role in spinal perfusion (Huntoon, 2005). The ascending and deep cervical arterial branches enter the external opening of the posterior intervertebral foramen near the target area for transforaminal injections. These branches occasionally supply anterior radicular and segmental medullary arteries to the spinal cord (Furman, 2003; Hoeft, 2006). Cadaver dissection revealed ascending and deep cervical arterial branches entering the external opening of the posterior intervertebral foramen. At lumbar level, the artery radicularis magna or artery of Adamckievich enters the left foramina between D9 and L1 in 75% of the patients and between D7-D9 in 15% and 10% of the cases in L1-L4. The artery usually enters in the superior or middle portion of the neural foramen, slightly ventral and superolateral to the dorsal root ganglion. Injury to the artery of Adamkiewicz can result in MINERVA ANESTESIOLOGICA March 2013 ABSTRACT Figure 4.—Human in vitro anatomical model at lumbar level. Review unintentional possibility of arterial vessel injection closed out sensitive spinal lumbar ganglia with different needles. Needles: 22G Quincke needle, 25G Whitacre needle and 22G Blunt nerve block needles (Epimed International). devastating ischemia of the lower spinal cord causing the anterior spinal artery syndrome (Gillilan, 1958; Huntoon, 2005). We found vessels next to the nerve root cuff. Trying to improve our view, we dissected the dural sac together with nerve root cuffs and plexus roots in three cadavers. During dissection we kept vessels close to nerve root cuffs and plexus roots. This area is the target region for placement of needles during selective root blocks. The diameter of these arteries was 1-2 mm at cervical, thoracic and lumbar level near the puncture zone. Commonly used needles with sharp and blunt tips were introduced into these vessels (Figures 1, 2, 3 and 4). This study allowed us to verify that the possibility of arterial injection during a selective root block technique is possible at cervical level as well as thoracic and lumbar level. Incidence of intravascular uptake in cervical and lumbar transforaminal steroid injection procedures by unintentional and unnoticed penetration of radicular arteries was studied. It occurs at different percentage; at cervical level were 3.9% (Verrills et al., 2008), 11.2% (Furman et al, 2000, 2003) 11.3% (Kim et al., 2009), at thoracic level 0.7% (Verrills et al., 2008), at the lumbar levels 0.9% (Kim et al., 2009), 3.7%(115) 8.1% (Furman et al, 2000, 2003), and at S1 21.3% (Furman et al, 2000, 2003). Vol. 79 - Suppl. 1 to No. 3 Another possibility could be simultaneous epidural and vascular injection during cervical transforaminal epidural injections. It occurs by partial vascular penetration: at cervical level were 13.9% (Smuck et al., 2009) and 52.1% (Furman et al., 2000, 2003); at lumbar level was 9% (Furman et al, 2000, 2003) and 32.8% (Smuck et al., 2009). Steroid with particle sizes larger than 1,000 microns cannot theoretically enter the vessel. Because the solution is usually shaken before it is injected, it is possible that the steroid particles coalesce and precipitate to form the large particles after the steroid has entered the blood vessel. The mediumsized particles (51-1,000 microns) can enter and partially occlude the vessels. Smaller particles (1050 microns) may not be able to occlude the arteries (Benzon et al., 2007). However, these smaller particles can occlude the arterioles and capillaries, causing tissue damage. It is therefore possible that any particulate steroid can occlude the distal portions of the arteries. In epidural steroid injections, the steroids are usually diluted to decrease the concentration. Benzon et al., 2007 found that dilution did not decrease the size of the particles except in compounded betamethasone, in which increasing dilutions with the local anesthetic decreased the proportion of the larger particles. Methylprednisolone, triamcinolone, and betamethasone have been associated with ischemic complications reported while dexamethasone was not (Derby, 2008) Dexamethasone sodium phosphate particle size was approximately 10 times smaller than red blood cells and the particles did not appear to aggregate (Derby, 2008; Reina, 2010; Gazelka, 2012). These characteristics should significantly reduce the risk of embolic infarcts or prevent them from occurring after intra-arterial injection. Triamcinolone acetonide and betamethasone sodium phosphate showed variable sizes; some particles were larger than red blood cells, and aggregation of particles was evident. Methylprednisolone acetate showed uniformity in size and most of the particles were smaller than red blood cells which were not aggregated, but the particles were densely packed (Derby, 2008; Reina, 2010; Gharibo, 2009; Gazelka, 2012) We studied different particulate steroids with scanning electron microscopy and observed crystals in normal conditions without dilution and after dilution with local anaesthetic. Two solutions were made, one with 1 cc of steroid and 1 cc of lidocaine 1%, used for transforaminal injection and MINERVA ANESTESIOLOGICA 59 ABSTRACT another with 1 cc of steroid and 10 cc of bupivacaine 0.25%, used for epidural administration; both were filtered through a milipore filter of 0.2 microns. In normal conditions, without dilution, triamcinolone particles piled on the filter. With betamethasone and dexamethasone there were few particles and none with methylprednisolone. When diluted with local anaesthetic, only the use of triamcinolone appeared in different sizes in the filter: 10-100 microns in the dilution 1:1 with lidocaine 1% and 10-60 microns when diluted 1:10 with bupivacaine 0.25%. Sharp versus Blunt Needles could be used in this technique. While some authors advocate to use blunt needles (Heavner et al., 2003, Raghavendra and Patel, 2005), others (Helm et al., 2003; Smuck and Leung, 2011) reported inadvertent injection during cervical transforaminal injection. Al¬though the use of blunt tip needles seems prudent, we lack clinical evidence that complications with blunt needles would not occur. When studying bevel implication, the incidence of vascular injections in the short-bevel needle group was 15.6% compared with the long-bevel needles group, 12.8% (Smuck et al., 2010). It did not reduce the risk of inadvertent vascular injection in lumbosacral transforaminal epidural injections. Neither needle gauge used were no statistical differences in the overall rates of vascular injection (Smuck et al., 2010). We can see that introduction of sharp type needles of 22G inside the artery was possible. The point of blunt needle may push the wall of artery and could be more difficult it. However, if that tip of needle perforated the artery, steroid particles will be intravascular injected. Conclusions The size and location of radicular arteries requires us to put extreme precaution when we perform transforaminal or selective root blocks at cervical and lumbar regions. Radicular arteries perforation and unintentional or unnoticed arterial injections is possible and increases as the do more attempts. It is necessary to restrict the attempts to a certain number, especially at cervical level, due to a higherrisk. We should also avoid movement of the needle with further manipulation after placement and we should attach a syringe with therapeutic medication (Tiso et al., 2004). Advices to avoid these complications have to include the use of nonparticulate steroids, test dose of local anesthetic before injection of steroids, live 60 fluoroscopy, digital subtraction, not using light sedation, use of true lateral view to supplement frontal and oblique views in fluoroscopy, use of blunt needles, and computed tomography guidance. References 1. Baker R, Dreyfuss P, Mercer S, Bogduk N. Cervical transforaminal injection of corticosteroids into a radicular artery: a possible mechanism for spinal cord injury. Pain 2003;103: 211-5. 2. Benzon HT, Chew TL, McCarthy RJ, Benzon HA, Walega DR. Comparison of the particle sizes of different steroids and the effect of dilution. A review of the relative neurotoxicities of the steroids. Anesthesiology 2007;106:331-8. 3. Brouwers PJ, Kottink EJ, Simon MA, Prevo RL. A cervical anterior spinal artery syndrome after diagnostic blockade of the right C6-nerve root. Pain 2001;91:397-9. 4. Derby R, Lee SH, Date ES, Lee JH, Lee CH. 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Am J For Med Pathol 2003;24:351-5. 27. Scanlon GC, Moeller-Bertram T, Romanowsky SM, Wallace MS. Cervical transforaminal epidural ster- Vol. 79 - Suppl. 1 to No. 3 oid injection: more dangerous than we think? Spine 2007;32:1249-56. 28. Scott E. Glaser, MD, and Frank Falco. Paraplegia Following a Thoracolumbar Transforaminal Epidural Steroid Injection.Pain Physician 2005;8:309-14. 29. Smuck M, Tang CT, Fuller BJ. Incidence of simultaneous epidural and vascular injection during cervical transforaminal epidural injections. Spine 2009;34:E751-755. 30. Smuck M, Yu AJ, Tang CT, Zemper E. Influence of needle type on the incidence of intravascular injection during transforaminal epidural injections: a comparison of shortbevel and long bevel needles. Spine J 2010;10:367-71. 31. Smuck M, Leung D. Inadvertent injection of a cervical radicular artery using an atraumatic pencil-point needle. Spine 2011;36:E220-223. 32. Somayaji HS, Saifuddin A, Casey AT, Briggs TW. Spinal cord infarction following therapeutic computed tomography-guided left L2 nerve root injection. Spine 2005;30: E106-108. 33. Suresh S, Berman J, Connel DA. Cerebellar and brainstem infarction as a complication of CT-guided transforaminal cervical nerve root block. Skeletal Radiol 20007;36:44952. 34. Tiso RL, Cutler T, Whalen K, Catania JA. Adverse central nervous system sequelae after selective transforaminal block: the role of corticosteroids. Spine J 2004;4:468-74. 35. Verrills P, Mitchell B, Vivian D, Nowesenitz G, Lovell B, Sinclair C. The incidence of intravascular penetration in medial branch blocks: cervical, thoracic, and lumbar spines. Spine 2008;33:E174-7. 36. Ziai WC, Ardelt AA, Llinas RH. Brainstem stroke following uncomplicated cervical epidural steroid injection. Arch Neurol 2006;63:1643-6. MINERVA ANESTESIOLOGICA 61 POSTERS Survival on controlled-release (CR) morphine versus cr oxycodone in opioidnaïve patients with non-malignant pain: data from Danish national health registers Robin Christensen 1, - Henning Bliddal 1, Simon Tarp 1, Peter Vestergaard 2 1The Parker Institute, Department of Rheumatology Copenhagen University Hospital, Frederiksberg Copenhagen F, Denmark 2Institute of Medicine and Health Technology, Aalborg University, Aalborg, Denmark Background and aims. Opioids provide one treatment option for Chronic non-cancer pain (CNCP). This study was conducted to compare the risk of patients rotating opioid therapy from either controlled-release (CR) morphine or CR oxycodone in opioid-naïve patients with non-malignant pain. Methods. By individual-level linkage of the Danish nationwide administrative registries between 20052007, adult patients who were prescribed either CR morphine or CR oxycodone, who had not previously been prescribed opioids (at least six months prior to “baseline” defined as the first prescription of CR morphine or CR oxycodone), were followed up for as long as 3 years (maximally until December 31, 2007). Patients with a cancer diagnosis were excluded from the study and subsequent analyses. Adjusted for age, sex, comorbidity, calendar year, concomitant pharmacotherapy, income and social status, Hazard Ratios (HR) for the association between opioid treatment (CR-oxycodone vs. CRmorphine) and withdrawal from opioid therapy were analysed by Cox proportional-hazard models. The main outcome measure was the number of patients switching from one type of opioid to another; secondary outcome was the number of patients who were able to withdraw from opioid therapy (i.e., no further need for opioid analgesics). Results. Of the 101,635 patients assessed for inclusion, 75,587 (74%) had been prescribed opioids 6 months prior to enrolment and 4,818 (5%) had a cancer diagnosis. In total, 21,230 patients were enrolled, 16,553 (78%) were prescribed CR-oxy- Vol. 79 - Suppl. 1 to No. 3 codone and 4,677 (22%) CR-morphine. Of these, 5,750 (35%) CR-oxycodone patients and 2,166 (46%) CR-morphine patients switched to another opioid. After adjustment, CR-oxycodone was associated with a statistically significant reduced risk for rotation (switch) to another opioid compared to CR morphine; HR = 0.82 (95%CI: 0.78-0.87; P<0.001). Among patients still on therapy at time of censoring (possible drug addiction development), 4.5% (112) were still using CR-morphine and 2.1% (231) were using CR-oxycodone. Conclusions. This study demonstrates a significantly greater risk (18%) for opioid rotation using CR-morphine compared with CR-oxycodone in patients suffering from non-malignant pain. The role of tramadol in labor analgesia Teresa Letizia Di Gennaro 1, Maria Beatrice Passavanti 1, Maria Caterina Pace 1, Francesco Coletta 1, Silvia D’arienzo 1, Raffaela Stumbo 1, Vincenzo Pota 1, Pasquale Sansone 1, Caterina Aurilio 1 1Seconda Università degli Studi di Napoli, Aou S.u.n., Napoli, Italy Introduction. Perineal trauma caused by episiotomy and lacerations occurring during vaginal delivery are often associated to female chronic pelvic pain , whose etiopathogenesis is multifactorial. In particular, one of the most important risk factors linked to pain chronicization is pain intensity during labor. Coadministration of opiates and local anesthetics to get the pudendal nerve block could reduce pain chronicization. Aim of the study. The aim of our study was to compare the efficacy of tramadol, an opiate with local anesthetic properties, vs mepivacaine 2% and vs the association of tramadol plus mepivacaine 2% to get the pudendal nerve block during the expulsive stage of delivery (with cervix dilatation > 7cm). Materials and methods. In our cohort observational longitudinal 24 months long study were enrolled 75 ASA I or II , 20-32 aged primiparas sche- MINERVA ANESTESIOLOGICA 63 POSTERS duled for normal vaginal delivery. Patients, in fact, were at 37th - 41st gestational week and reported foetal growth within normal limits, vertex presentation, singleton pregnancy, negative obstetric anamnesis, BMI < 30. Patients were randomly allocated in 3 groups according to the drug administered to get pudendal nerve block: GROUP T (n=25 pts) received tramadol 100 mg per nerve, GROUP MT (n=25 pts) received tramadol 100 mg plus mepivacaine 2% 7 mL per nerve and GROUP M (n=25 pts) was administered mepivacaine 2% 7mL per nerve. The total amount of injected drugs was 10 mL, variably reached by the addition of 0,9% saline solution. Maternal- foetal strict monitoring during delivery was assessed through foetal tocography, Apgar score at childbirth and 5 minutes later, uterine contractions intensity, continuous maternal heart rate and venous oxygen saturation and arterial blood pressure every 5 minutes per patient. Pain severity was assessed by VNRS (Verbal Numerical Rating Scale) 10 minutes after pudendal nerve block (t0) , at childbirth (t1) , episiorraphy (t2) , and 12 hours (t3) , 36hours (t4) , 2 and 6 months (t5 and t6 respectively) after delivery. Pelvic Pain Assessment Form (PPAF) was performed too at anesthesiological visit and 2 and 6 months after delivery. The length of labor stages was monitored too. Results. In our cohort all patients presented similar demographic characteristics. As concerning maternal- foetal monitoring and delivery stages time, no statistically significant differences were observed among the three study groups. No PPAF administered at the anesthesiological visit was already suggestive for chronic pelvic pain. As concerning acute pain, in particular, at childbirth 48% of patients of group M reported moderate pain (VNRS score: 6) which did not reduce until episiorraphy. 36% of patients of group M complained of weakmoderate pain (VNRS score: 4) at t1, increasing at t2 time(VNRS score: 5). 16% of patients of group M complained of weak pain (VNRS score: 2) both at t1 and t2 time. Furthermore only patients complaining of moderate pain (VNRS score: 6) continued to report moderate pain with VNRS score 4 at t3 and t4 time and a VNRS score 0 at t5 and t6 except 4 patients still complaining of weak pain with a VNRS score 3 at t5 and t6 time. Only 4 of the above mentioned patients were diagnosed chronic pelvic pain by PPAF administration. In group T, moreover, 20 % of patients complained of weak- moderate pain with a VNRS score 4 at childbirth (t1) and at episiorraphy (t2). The 64 same patients registered a VNRS score 2 until t4 evaluation. Four patients vomited postoperatively within 3 hours from the performance of the block. No patient of group T was diagnosed with chronic pelvic pain. Patients of group MT resulted better satisfied of the antalgic approach because of a weak pain report (VNRS score 2 in 65% of patients, VNRS score 1 in 35% of patients) at t1 and t2 time. Subsequently all except one of patients reported a VNRS score 0. Just one patient complained of pain with VNRS score 2 at t3 and t4 times and suffered of postoperative vomiting 2 hours after delivery. No patient of group MT underwent pain chronicization. Conclusions. Our study confirms local anesthetic properties of tramadol, also for definitely higher pain intensity, such as that of childbirth. An effective pain control at the expulsive stage of delivery deals with a rarer pain chronicization such as assessed by PPAF. Tramadol plus local anesthetic pudendal nerve block (Group MT) deals with more satisfactory results. Statistically significant is the difference concerning moderate pain incidence in group MT vs groups T and M, everytime. Local anesthetic and analgesic properties make tramadol an atipic, handly and ductile opiate in parturients. Tramadol use and indications could more and more widespread. Female chronic pelvic pain post vaginal delivery laceration is just one of the multiple pathologies which could benefit from tramadol block by nerve infiltration. Efficacy of pain therapy and quality of life in opioid-naïve patients treated with oxycodone/naloxone or other strong opioids Sabine Hesselbarth 1 1Regional Pain And Palliative Care Centre, Group Practice, Mainz, Germany Background and aims. Patients treated with opioids often complain about a reduced quality of life due to bowel dysfunction and other impairments of daily life. This non-interventional study (NIS) was designed to determine pain control, bowel function, and quality of life (QoL) in patients treated with oxycodone/naloxone (OXN) prolongedrelease (PR) or other strong opioids. Methods. In this 4-6-week prospective, multicenter, Ethics Committee-approved NIS, data were recorded at three visits (baseline, after 1-2 weeks, study end) in 141 centers. Efficacy was measured MINERVA ANESTESIOLOGICA March 2013 POSTERS by changes in pain intensity (Numeric Rating Scale (NRS)). Opioid-induced bowel dysfunction was assessed using the bowel function index (BFI). Health outcome parameters were measured by EuroQoL-5D. Results. In total 588 patients were included in this NIS. A subgroup of 263 patients with nonopioid pre-treatment was analyzed: 154 patients were treated with up to 40mg/20mg OXN PR/day and 6 patients with up to 80mg/40mg OXN PR/ day, 103 patients were treated with other strong opioids. Mean pain intensity (MPI) was reduced significantly in both OXN PR groups from NRS 7.2 to 3.8 and from NRS 7.0 to 3.0. In patients treated with other strong opioids MPI decreased from NRS 7.0 to 4.9. Mean BFI decreased from NRS 25.8 to 13.7 and from NRS 41.1 to 26.9 in both OXN PR groups, respectively, whereas BFI increased from NRS 21.8 to 24.3 in patients receiving other strong opioids. Mobility (no problems in walking about) increased in both OXN PR groups from 11.7% to 40.3% and from 0% to 50.0% of patients, respectively. The increase in the other strong opioid group was less remarkable (11.7% to 18.4%). Conclusions. In this NIS, patients with non-opioid pre-treatment treated with OXN PR benefited from better efficacy, tolerability, and QoL compared to patients treated with other strong opioids, supporting initiation of OXN therapy in opioidnaïve patients. Low dose of lidocaine (ld) enhances in vitro natural killer (nk) cell function Maria F Ramirez 1, Lavinia Bergesio 2, Mark J. Truty MD 3, Juan P Cata 1 1Md Anderson Cancer Center, University of Texas, Houston, United States 2Fondazione Irccs Policlinico San Matteo, Universisty of Pavia, Pavia, Italy 3Department of Gastroenterology and General Surgery. Mayo Clinic. Rochester. Minnesota. USA Background. The perioperative period represents a time of vulnerability for patients undergoing cancer surgery because there are a number of factors, including blood transfusion, volatile anesthetics, opioids and surgical stress response that have been suggested to impair the immune system. (Cata, 2011) Natural killer (NK) cells are key players of the immune response because they are able Vol. 79 - Suppl. 1 to No. 3 Figure 1.—The figure depicts the cytotoxic function of natural killer cells before and after surgery. It can be appreciated that there is a significant postoperative decrease in the function compared to preoperative levels. *, p<0.05. to destroy cancer cells (Wu and Lanier, 2003). Experimental studies have demonstrated that the function of the NK killer cells is decreased by volatile anesthetics, opioids and surgery.(Goldfarb, 2011; Hogan, 2011; Vallejo, 2003) Importantly, the impairment in the function those cells correlate with tumor growth. Similar results have been found in humans with cancer who undergo cancer surgery. (Espi, 1996) Our laboratory reported that the function of the NK cells is decreased immediately after lung surgery (Accepted for publication, Journal of Clinical Anesthesia, 2013). One of the means of ameliorating the immunosuppression observed in the perioperative period is by avoiding volatile anesthetics, opioids and modulation of stress response. Local anesthetics when used intravenously or as part of regional analgesia have the ability of block the stress response and induce significant anesthesia and analgesia hence reducing the need of volatile anesthetics and opioids. Lidocaine is a widely used local anesthetic. In vitro studies suggest that lidocaine when used at doses found in peripheral tissues during regional anesthesia decreases the function of NK cells (Krog, 2002; Mitsuhata, 1991). However, the effect of lower doses of lidocaine on NK cells cytotoxicity has so far not been studied. The aim of the present study is therefore to investigate the in vitro effect of low doses of lidocaine on the NK cell cytotoxicity of cancer patients. Methods. This study was approved by the Institutional Board Review of our institution. Blood samples were collected from patients with abdominal malignancies or osteosarcoma who underwent tumor resective surgery under general balanced MINERVA ANESTESIOLOGICA 65 POSTERS A B Figure 2.—The figure illustrates the effect of lidocaine on the function of NK cells. It can be observed that lidocaine significantly improved the function of those cells. anesthesia. Blood specimens were collected preoperatively and on days 1, 3 and 5 after surgery. Peripheral mononuclear cells (PBMC) were isolated with Ficoll-paque (Ficoll plaque TM plus, GE Healthcare) gradient centrifugation technique. Natural killer cells (CD56+) were isolated through positive selection (MidiMACS TM starting kit, MACS Miltenyi Biotec). The human myeloid cell line K-562 was used as the target cell (ATCC). Cytotoxicty assays were performed at an effector: target ratio of 1:1 and 10:1. After 20 hour of incubation with and without lidocaine (20 nM), 100 µl of supernatant was collected from each well to measure the levels of lactate dehydrogenase release and thus calculate the function of NK cell (LDH cytotoxicity detection kit, Clontech). The effect of lidocaine was tested at the lowest level of NK cell function. A Kruskal-Wallis or paired T- tests were used. Values 66 are expressed in mean +/- sd. A p value lower than 0.05 was considered statistically significant. Results. Data from a total of 12 patients were included in the analysis. The mean percentage of NK cells was comparable before and after surgery. Briefly, the mean percentage of those cells preoperatively was 13.89% +/- 5.79 and that on days 1, 3 and 5 postoperatively was 12.12% +/- 4.62, 14.59% +/- 5.4 and 11.23% +/- 3.89, respectively (p=0.419). The function of the NK cells was lower postoperatively than preoperatively (p=0.024) (Figure 1). The addition of lidocaine enhanced the function of NK killer cells. Figure 2 demonstrates that when lidocaine was added the cytotoxic activity of the NK cells increased significantly (p=0.0424). Discussion. In the present study we demonstrated for the first time that the addition of lidocaine at a dose of 20 nM enhances the function of NK killer cells. This finding is clinically relevant because the dose that we used is much lower to that reported to cause systemic toxicity or even to that that is clinically used when lidocaine is used systemically. It is difficult to hypothesize the mechanism or mechanisms behind our findings. One possible explanation is that the activity of NK cells is more efficient when cancer cells have started apoptosis or mitotic arrest. This speculation is based on previous studies that demonstrated that local anesthetics are able to induce cancer cell death. Preliminary data from our laboratory indicates that at the dose of lidocaine used in this study this local anesthetic is able to induce some cell death (data not showed) which is much pronounced at larger doses. We decided to use this dose of lidocaine due to possibility that at higher doses would impair the function of NK cells or induce death on them; although this last statement is merely speculative. In the present study, we also confirmed data from previous studies from our group and others that indicate that the function of NK cells that is impaired postoperatively. (Greenfeld, 2007) Our study suffers from several limitations. First, the small sample size and observational nature of the study. Second, the in vitro model that we used. Last, we did not test higher dose of lidocaine hence we do not know if the effects on NK cells is dosedependent or not. Conclusion: Our study indicates that at a low dose lidocaine enhances the function of NK cells. More studies are needed to confirm our findings and to have an understanding on the potential mechanisms behind our findings. MINERVA ANESTESIOLOGICA March 2013 POSTERS Neuropsychological effects of opioid drugs in chronic pain patients: state of art Valentina Caserio 1, Federica Rossi 1, Nicola Allegri 1, Cristina E. Minella 2, Stefano Govoni 3, Davide Liccione 4 1Scuola Lombarda di Psicoterapia (slop), Scuola Lombarda di Psicoterapia (slop), Retorbido, Italy 2Pain Therapy Service, Foundation Irccs Policlinico San Matteo, Pavia, Italy 3Department of Drug Sciences, Pharmacology Section, University of Pavia, Pavia, Italy 4Department of Psychology, University of Pavia, Pavia, Italy) Background and aim. Lawlor (2002b) describes cognition as brain’s acquisition, processing, storage and retrieval of information. Cognitive functioning can be evaluated by means of validated neuropsychological tests able to assess several ability such as attention, learning and memory, psychomotor ability and executive functions (which include working memory, inhibition, planning and decision making skills). A recent review by Hart and colleagues (2000) identifies a series of clinical evidences suggesting neuropsychological impairment in patients with chronic pain: decrements in test performance have been found especially on memory, attentional and executive tasks, associated with reduced psychomotor speed. Opioid analgesics are widely used to treat moderate to severe persistent pain. Their role in the long-term treatment of chronic noncancer pain is controversial. Side effects such as constipation, nausea and sedation often limit the effectiveness of opioids, leading to early discontinuation, under-dosing and inadequate analgesia. Among the most well-known adverse effects, cognitive and psychomotor impairment are particularly worrisome and often hinder clinicians and patients from initiating or optimizing therapy, despite analgesic effectiveness. Many patients report a subjective feeling of mental dullness, fuzziness, slow reactions time and problem solving difficulties after drug use (Moriarty et al., 2011; Erseck et al., 2004). Theoretical explanation for such effects is suggested by the presence of opioid receptors in many areas of the brain that are involved in attention, memory, learning and executive functions (Chapman et al. 2002). Given the clinical importance of this topic, many researchers have recently examined the relationship between pain and cognition in relation to the effects of pharmacological opioid treatment. Opioids may be associated with cognitive dysfunction and may exacerbate Vol. 79 - Suppl. 1 to No. 3 already existing neuropsychological difficulties. On the other hand, the analgesic relief, derived from the assumption of medication, can reverse the pain-induced cognitive impairment. The aim of this review is to define the state of art of the latest studies that have investigated the relationship between chronic pain, opioids drugs and cognitive functions. Method. We reviewed relevant English language publications available from 2000 and 2012 in which neuropsychological effects of opioids in chronic pain patients have been investigated. Electronic databases were searched, such as Pubmed, and selected articles were cross-checked for other relevant publications. Keywords included were chronic pain, opioid, cognitive impairment and neuropsychological functions. Since we wanted to focus on information relevant to patients with chronic nonmalignant pain, our review exclude studies that addressed the cognitive effects of opioids therapy in cancer pain patients. We also omitted papers that examined data obtained from opioid administration in healthy volunteers and nonclinical pain populations as well as those from preclinical samples. The exclusion of these last studies is due to the difficulty in generalizing the findings to the clinical setting. Results. Findings do not allow the definition of a clear relationship among pain, opioids and cognitive deficits; while some studies found that opioids cause a significant decrease in mental status (Sjogren et al.2000; Kamboj et al. 2005), others fail to demonstrate such impairment (Dagtekin et al. 2007; Agarwal et al.), or even show that opioid have beneficial effects on cognition (Tassain et al. 2003; Jamison et al. 2003). This discrepancy is likely due to methodological differences among studies: first of all, many studies adopted dissimilar operational definitions of psychological constructs (i.e. “memory”) and used different neuropsychological tests (memory can be conceptualized as working memory, short or long term memory; recall can be immediate or delayed, free or with cueing and for each of these meanings specific tools are available) Several studies examined one or just a few cognition dimensions and failed to assess the complete neuropsychological profile of patients, because they didn’t include other abilities (such as high language skills) not necessary associated with pain but potentially compromised since related to attention and executive functions. Secondary, MINERVA ANESTESIOLOGICA 67 POSTERS few works controlled adequately the potential confounding effects of variables related to analgesic medication. There was a great variability about type and doses of drugs (i.e. morphine, oxycodone, fentanyl, buprenorphine, tramadol), time of treatment. Moreover, experimental samples differed for type of pain-disease, illness duration, location and intensity of pain. Comorbidity with psychopathologies (i.e. depression, anxiety) and the contribution of relevant demographic variables, as age and level of education, were not always considered. Conclusion. Chronic pain is recognized as a biopsychosocial phenomenon in which biological, psychological and social factors dynamically interact with each other (Gathchel 2007).Attentive, mnestic and executive abilities represents a fundamental corollary of the model, given the role they play in physical functioning and in emotional pain modulation. Indeed, for people with chronic pain illnesses efficient neuropsychological abilities are critical for performing daily activities such as driving and for achieving compliance to therapeutic treatment. Negative effects on cognition can intensify pain, anxiety, depression and constrain communication of pain symptoms to clinicians. Moreover, complementary non-pharmacological interventions, such as supportive psychotherapy or patient psycho-education, demand intact cognitive functioning to be effective. At the present, the great variability of experimental conditions among studies evaluating effects of opioid therapy on cognition limits the generalizability of findings: further methodological ad hoc researches, including comprehensive neuropsychological battery, longitudinal follow up, adequate sample size and proper chronic pain non-medicated control groups, are needed. Other studies are necessary in order to compensate the paucity of experimental trials about adverse opioid effects in older patients with or without neurodegenerative impairment. Since the successful of drug therapy depends on achieving a subjective balance between analgesic efficacy and possible side effects, proper patient screening, education, and preventive treatment of potential side effects may aid in maximizing effectiveness while reducing the severity of side effects and adverse events. Finally, advanced knowledge about the cognitive impact of opioid treatment may explain brain mechanisms that mediate both pain and cognition. 68 Analgesia nociception index: a new system of monitoring of pain of patient under general anesthesia Eleonora Schiappa (1) - Christian Compagnone (1) Fernanda Tagliaferri (1) - Marco Berti (1) - Guido Fanelli (1) Azienda Ospedaliero-Universitara Parma, Università di Parma, Parma, Italy (1) Background and aims. There are no specific indicators of intraoperative pain. Currently, pain is measured using indirect parameters, such as heart rate and blood pressure, in adjustment of drugs in anesthesia. Unfortunately, many factors can alter these parameters which, although useful, are not neither specific nor sensitive indicators of pain and analgesia. Several authors have repeatedly used the Heart Rate Variability (HRV) in order to characterize the activity of the autonomic nervous system (ANS) during anesthesia to find a parameter that could be reliable and helpful for the proper management of intraoperative pain. The pain may alter the HVR, so its analysis could be used as a target parameter of the degree of pain. The hemodynamic reactivity (increase in HR and SBP of 20%) can be expected by measuring the reaction of the ANS to nociception using HRV. Unfortunately, the study of HRV is complex, not allowing the use and systematic interpretation in an operating room. In the last years, as an alternative, a new system of monitoring (Physiodoloris) has been developed. This system provides a new index defined ANI (Analgesia nociception Index) for the assessment of the balance nociception / analgesia during general anesthesia. The monitor Physiodoloris is able to measure pain by analyzing the patient’s heart rhythm. The monitor is connected to the ECG and provides a real-time index, ANI that is the result of the analysis of the variability of the RR series. ANI is expressed on a scale from 0 to 100 % and gives a continuous reading of the proportion of parasympathetic tone in ANS. In fact, the sinus node of the heart, that induces the regulation of the heart rhythm, is connected with the sympathetic and parasympathetic branches of the autonomic nervous system (ANS). In presence of a parasympathetic tone, each respiratory cycle influences the RR range, causing a slight reduction in the cardiac cycle that corresponds to a small increase in heart rate, known as Respiratory Sinus Arrhythmia (RSA). In case of a decrease of the parasympathetic tone, the influence of each respiratory cycle is damped. This explains why the area of influence in the respiratory RR MINERVA ANESTESIOLOGICA March 2013 POSTERS series can be used to evaluate the activity of the parasympathetic tone, hence the balanced analgesia / nociception. In presence of a painful stimulus surgery, or when the analgesic effect is reduced, the parasympathetic tone decreases with a corresponding increase in sympathetic activity, which will ultimately lead to a reduction of the Index. Consequently, the mathematical analysis of these variations provides a snapshot image of the activity of the ANS, the adjustment of the heart rate and thus the regulation of pain. Considering a ANI cut-off of 50, we can assume that an ANI value lower than 50 may be indicative of pain / agitation. The aim of this study was to evaluate the effectiveness of ANI for the evaluation of pain in patients undergoing general anesthesia. Methods. Patients undergoing elective lobectomy were recruited. Exclusion criteria were patients younger than 18 years, ASA status greater than 3, inability to consent, inability to assess pain, known hypersensitivity to any of the drugs used in the study. The study involved the use of the monitor Phisiodoloris in patients undergoing thoracic surgery without changes to the standard protocol used in these patients. The protocol consists in the placement of an epidural catheter. After a test bolus with lidocaine 2%, infusion bolus of ropivacaine 3% to 5% were allowed. All patients underwent TIVA (Total Intravenous Anesthesia). In the operating room, patients were subjected to continuous monitoring of mean arterial pressure (invasive), ECG, heart rate, respiratory rate, BIS and ANI. The parameters were collected before induction (base), during the positioning of the epidural catheter, after induction, before and after each bolus injection of local anesthetic into the epidural catheter and during any potential nociceptive stimulus. At the end of surgery patients were asked to rate their pain on a numerical rating scales (NRS). Results. 8 patients were enrolled, 7 males (87.5%) and 1 female (12.5%) with a median ASA of 2 (IQR 1). The mean age was 73.6 + 11.7 years. Two patients reported intensive pain with the insertion of epidural catheter, 100% associated with an ANI lower than 50 and a difference from baseline ANI statistically significant (p =0.04). Four patients (57%) had an ANI less than 50 during the incision. The patient, who had a mean ANI < 50 during surgery (100%), reported pain at emergence from anesthesia (p=0,008). A significant correlation was found between Vol. 79 - Suppl. 1 to No. 3 the value of ANI at baseline (79 (IQR 30)) and the value of ANI at bolus (32 (IQR 33)) of local anesthetic/opioid into the epidural space was performed (p = 0.004). Conclusions. The intra-operative management of pain in patients under general anesthesia remains a challenge because there are no standardized models for its evaluation. We found an association between pain episodes and ANI values of less than 50. Our study aims to lay the groundwork for further investigation into the new index of nociception which we believe has potential clinical utility in the intraoperative management of patients, especially in the administration of medications to avoid over-or under-dosing. Further studies by increasing the number of patients and reducing the covariates in the study will increase the knowledge of this new index. Treatment of disk herniation by intradiscal oxygen-ozone (O2-O3) injection technique Marcella Sacco (1) - Guido Fanelli (1) - Fabrizio Micheli (2) Scuola di Specializzazione in Anestesia, Rianimazione e Terapia Antalgica, Azienda Ospedaliero-Universitaria, Parma, Italy (1) - U.o.c di Terapia del Dolore, Ospedale G. Da Saliceto, Piacenza, Italy (2) Background and aims. Disk herniation chronic pain is a very common disease and percutaneous treatment with intradiscal oxygen-ozone (O2-O3) could be considered as an alternative approach before major neurosurgery. Aim. Assessment of long-term effectiveness (1 year) of this technique by monitoring the pain relief in patients with back and neck disk herniation. Methods. 88 medical records of patients treated with percutaneous O2-O3 intradiscal injection (January 2004-December 2006, Pain Therapy Centre, Piacenza Hospital) were retrospectively reviewed. The follow up examinations, succeeding the treatment, were recorded at one week, one month, six months and, one year. Pain was measured with the numeric scale (NRS). For the clinical outcome, the quality of life and the therapeutic success the modified MacNab method was used. The statistical analysis, for both NRS and MacNab scale, was performed with non-parametric Wilcoxon test. Results. 79 patients were enrolled (9 patients did MINERVA ANESTESIOLOGICA 69 POSTERS not meet inclusion criteria). According to the modified MacNab score the treatment was “successful” (disappearance of symptoms, complete recovery in working and sports activities, occasional episodes of low back pain/sciatica, no limitations of occupational activities) in 55% of patients with low back pain. Therefore, patients with cervical disk herniation had no benefit from the treatment. Considering the lumbar chronic pain subgroups, among the patients with lumbar iatrogenic or degenerative canal stenosis, complicated by disk herniation, the success was achieved for 52.3% of subjects; in disk herniation at L4-L5 or L5-S1 the success was for the 51.85% of cases; in patients with multiple herniated disk the rate of success was 57.10%. Statistical analysis showed a significant reduction of pain (p < 0.00). Fourteen patients with lower back pain underwent to major surgery for relapsed symptoms after 1 month. Conclusion. We confirm the efficacy of percutaneous O2-O3 intradiscal injection for the majority of patients with lumbar disk herniation pain. Intra-articular pulsed radiofrequency treatment in chronic knee osteoarthritis pain with ultrasound-guided tecnique Giuliano De Carolis 1, Lara Tollapi 1, Franca Bondi 1, Mery Paroli 1, Antonella Ciaramella 1, Paolo Poli 1 Pain Therapy Unit - Dept. of Oncology, Santa Chiara University Hospital, Pisa, Italy (1) Background. Chronic osteoarthritis (OA) pain of the knee is often not effectively managed with conservative treatments models and some of them have serious adverse effects. Pulsed Radiofrequency (PRF) is a therapeutic alternative for chronic pain. We investigated short- and mid-term effectiveness of intra-articular PRF applied with ultrasound (US) guided technique in patients with chronic knee pain due to OA. Methods. This study was carried out in the pain unit of Santa Chiara University hospital between January 2011 and June 2011.Twenty-one female patients who received intra-articular PRF were retrospectively reviewed. Intensity of pain and activity were evaluated by a VAS (0=no pain/activity; 10=worst possible pain/activity). Patients were evaluated at baseline and after 1, 2, 3 mths from PRF. Changes in pain medications were noted. Results. Mean sample age was 78, 2 yrs. Before PRF mean intensity of pain was 8.9. During 70 3 months follow-up period all patients showed a significant reduction of pain during activity. Pain intensity was 3,8 after 1 mth; 4,2 after 2mths and 5 after 3mths. Pain was absent at rest that resulted in an improvement in quality of sleep. Activity improved but not in significant way probably due to the high average age. All patients decreased drugs rescue dose. Conclusion. PRF applied to the knee joint appears to be effective in pain reduction and functional improvement in a subset of elderly chronic knee OA pain. Further trials with larger sample size and longer follow-up are warranted. Pain relief and quality of life after spinal cord stimulation for fbss: a comparison between paddle and cylindrical lead Giuliano De Carolis 1, Mery Paroli 1, Lara Tollapi 1, Franca Bondi 1, Antonella Ciaramella 1, Paolo Poli 1 Pain Therapy Unit- Dept. of Oncology, Santa Chiara University Hospital, Pisa, Italy (1) Introduction. In FBSS patients is difficult to manage low back pain with spinal cord stimulation (SCS). The performance between paddle and cylindrical shaped SCS lead was evaluated collecting data on pain relief and quality of life improvement in patients with FBSS. Materials and methods. 81 patients with FBSS being eligible for SCS. 32 patients have been implanted a paddle lead (S8 seriesTM leads, St Jude Medical) and 49 a singular cylindrical lead (OctrodeTM leads, St Jude Medical). Outcome measures included pain scores assessed by visual analog scale (VAS) and the Italian version of McGill Pain Questionnaire (IPQ), pain medication, and patient quality of life assessed by SF-36 questionnaire. These scores were assessed before and at regular intervals after 3, 6, 12, 18, 24 mths after implantation. Results. Two groups did not differ in mean age and onset of pain. After 24 months VAS and all dimensions of IPQ decreased in significant way (p<. 001). Paddle and cylindrical leads did not show any significant difference both in VAS and IPQ dimensions. At the last follow-up 65% of paddle sub-group stopped their pain medications against only the 57% of the cylindrical lead. The variation (ΔT) of all SF-36 dimensions is higher in paddle subgroup (p<.05). Regarding the body area coverage, in the axial-lumbar area it was in a range of MINERVA ANESTESIOLOGICA March 2013 POSTERS 90-100% for the paddle and 60-70% for the cylindrical; in the radicular and lower limbs was in a range of 80-90% for both leads. No adverse events occurred during the surgical procedure. During the observation period no displacement occurred for paddle leads and 4 displacements occurred for the cylindrical ones. Conclusion. Paddle leads seemed to be an efficient alternative for patients with FBSS. Despite of the fact that there were non-significant differences in pain relief, more paddle patients reduced their disability and stopped their pain medications. Ultrasound guided tap block as part of fast-track multimodal rehabilitation after cesarean section Vito Torrano 1, Costantino Bolis 2, Ermenegildo Santangelo 3, Gianluca Russo 4 1U.O. Anestesia, Rianimazione e Terapia del Dolore, Azienda Ospedaliera della Provincia di Lodi, Lodi, Italy 2U.O. Anestesia, Rianimazione e Terapia del Dolore Azienda Ospedaliera della Provincia di Lodi, Lodi, 3Scuola di Specializzazione in Anestesia, Rianimazione e Terapia Antalgica Università Magna Graecia, Catanzaro 4U.O. Anestesia, Rianimazione e Terapia del Dolore Azienda Ospedaliera della Provincia di Lodi, Lodi, Italy Background and aims. Postoperative pain management of caesarean delivery should provide an adequate analgesia with minimal or no side effects for mother and her child. An effective postoperative analgesic regimen is important to facilitate the early ambulation, infant care (breast feeding, maternal-infant bonding) and prevention of postoperative morbidity (thromboembolic events). The transversus abdominis plexus provides sensory innervations to the anterolateral abdominal wall and it could be block as part of a multimodal pain treatment of caesarean section. Methods. Thirty patients (ASA I-II) undergoing caesarean deliveries at term were randomized to receive, at the end of surgery, epidural infusion (patient controlled epidural analgesia, PCEA, continuous 4ml/h of 0.125% levobupivacaine, , 2ml bolus with 15 min lockout) or bilateral Us-guided TAP Block (levobupivacaine 0.375% 20 ml for each side). All patients received standard spinal anaesthesia with levobupivacaine 10 mg and sufentanyl 2.5 mcg. We evaluated as our primary outcome the ambulation ability at 6 hours after surgery (walk test) Vol. 79 - Suppl. 1 to No. 3 and as secondary outcomes pain control at rest and on movement (NRS score at 6h, 12h, 18h, 24 h), side effect and patient satisfaction. Exclusions criteria included regular opioids use, BMI>35 (at the time of enrolment), a prepregnancy weight (<50 kg). Postoperative acetaminophen (1 gr every six our) was given in TAP group as part of multimodal pain management and tramadol (100 mg iv) was the rescue pain therapy. Results. US-guided Tap Block allow an earlier recovery after caesarean section compared to PCEA and provide similar adequate postoperative analgesia with less side effect. No patient required rescue drug. Conclusions. Tap block could be an effective tool as part of a multimodal analgesia treatment for caesarean section. Further research is essential to establish the optimal use of this relatively new technique. Lumbar intra-articular facet joint injections in the treatment of facet mediated low back pain Sameh Badran 1, Mohamed Madkor 2, Amr Abd Alkader 3, Ahmed Khatab 4, Tamer Mewida 5 1Department of Neurosurgery, Cairo University, Cairo, Egypt 2Department of Radiology, Ain Shams University, Cairo, Egypt 3Department of Orthopedics, Cairo University, Cairo, Egypt 4Department of Anesthesia, Ain Shams University, Cairo, Egypt 5Department of Anesthesia, Alazhar University, Cairo, Egypt Background. Facet joints are considered to be a common cause of chronic spinal pain. Facet joint interventions, including medial branch nerve blocks, intraarticular injections and neurotomies (radiofrequency and cryoneurolysis) are used to manage facet-mediated spinal pain; there is moderate evidence that injection of local anesthetic and steroids into the facet joint is diagnostic and potentially therapeutic. Appropriate use of fluoroscopic guidance can potentially reduce catastrophic complications and help in confirmation of needle location thus to improve the outcome .The purpose of this prospective study was to compare the effectiveness of image guided lumbar intrarticular facet injection of Hylan G-F 20 (Synvisc) versus steroids in the management of low back pain due to facet arthrosis and to evaluate patients’ satisfaction in each group. MINERVA ANESTESIOLOGICA 71 POSTERS Methods. This prospective, randomized, study included twenty four adult patients; with American Society of Anesthesiologists physical status (ASA) I or II, who presented with low back pain due facet arthrosis, after failure of conservative and medical treatment . Patients were allocated into 2 groups: The first group (Group I = 12 patients) had been treated with lumbar intrarticular facet injection of 1.0-1.5 ml of 0.5 % bupivacaine mixed with 40 mg methylprednisolone with needle position confirmation by computerized tomography guidance; while the second group ( Group II = 12 patients)had lumbar intrarticular facet injection of 1.0 ml of Hylan G-F 20 (Synvisc) under computerized tomography guidance. Using the 5-Points verbal Pain Scale, severity of back pain was rated and recorded before and after each procedure at intervals of 1 week, 3 months, and 4 months. AT six months after treatment patients’ satisfaction regarding the selected management were graded as per Modified MacNab’s outcome assessment of patient’s satisfaction. Results. There was statistical significant difference between the pre- and post- injection pain score at 1week, 3 months and 4 months within the same group (p<0.05).While there was no statistical significant difference between both groups, comparing the number of patients post injection, 7out of the twelve (58%) of group I, versus ten out of twelve (83%) of group II had no pain) P>0.05) with no complications recorded in both groups. Regarding the overall patients’ satisfaction; at the time of final assessment; seven patients (58%) of group I, whereas 9 patients (75%) of group II had complete satisfaction. Two patients in the first group and one patient in the second group were not satisfied by the treatment because of persistence of symptoms at 1 week and 4 weeks in group I; and the recurrence of symptoms at 17 weeks in Group II. Conclusion. Lumbar intrarticular facet injections with Hylan G-F 20 (Synvisc) or methylprednisolone performed under intermittent fluoroscopic visualization should be considered as a treatment option for patients with low back pain due to facet arthrosis. Neither the use of Hylan G-F 20 (Synvisc) nor methylprednisolone demonstrated any benefit over the other; both are effective and safe with considerable patient satisfaction up to 6 months post treatment. However samplesize restrictions preclude any definitive comment and blinded controlled studies with larger patient population are encouraged to evaluate the clinical safety and effectiveness of Hylan G-F 20 (Synvisc) injection into facet joints. 72 Ultrasound-guided alcohol injection in the treatment of Morton’s neuroma Gianluca Russo 1, Costantino Bolis 1, Ermenegildo Santangelo 2, Vito Torrano 1 1U.O. Anestesia, Rianimazione e Terapia del Dolore Azienda Ospedaliera della Provincia di Lodi, Lodi, Italy 2Scuola di Specializzazione in Anestesia, Rianimazione e Terapia Antalgica Università Magna Graecia, Catanzaro, Italy Background. The purpose of our retrospective study is to evaluate the efficacy of ultrasound guided alcohol injection as a treatment of Morton’s neuroma, a common cause of neuralgia. Morton’s neuroma is an benign neuroma of an intermetatarsal plantar nerve, second and third intermetatarsal spaces. Methods. Twenty seven patients with ultrasound diagnosis of Morton’s neuroma were treated in the past year. Ultrasound was even used to guide the alcohol injection (20% alcohol) causing toxicity to the fibrous nerve tissue. All this patients received other conservative treatment as corticosteroid injection or orthotics before alcohol ablation of the nerve. Results and conclusion. Partial or total symptom improvement was reported after the first injection and all patient becoming totally pain-free after three injection. Therefore ultrasound alcohol injections are an reliable treatment for Morton’neuroma, alternative to the surgery (neurectomy). Usually injections must be performed 2-3 times, with 1–3 weeks between interventions. The injections are well tolerated by the patients with low procedural pain. Compared with surgical neurectomy this technique has almost no serious complications or side effects and less significant recovery. However other well designed studies are needed. Comparison of analgesic effect of paracetamol and morphine infusion after elective laparotomy surgeries Peyman Yazdkhasti, Saeid Safari, Mahsa Motavaf Department of Anesthesiology and Pain Medicine, Rasoul Akram Medical Center, Tehran University of Medical Sciences, Tehran, Iran Background and aim. Introduction of the newest short-acting analgesic drugs for intraoperative pain control and widespread acceptance of them in anesthesia practice, has made the postoperative pain control a new dilemma to anesthesiologist, MINERVA ANESTESIOLOGICA March 2013 POSTERS especially in more painful surgical procedures (like laparotomy). Opioid narcotics had been traditionally used for this purpose but because of their side effect (like nausea, vomiting, and respiratory depression) have made us decrease their use. Scientists are still seeking for new analgesic agents with less side effects. Paracetamol-intravenously form of acetaminophen-is a new compound which has been studied for postoperative pain control. The aim of our study is to compare the analgesic effect of paracetamol and morphine infusion after elective laparotomy surgeries. Materials and methods. this is a double-blind study which was carried out on 150 ASA (American Society of Anesthesiology) class I-II patients between 27-85 years that were scheduled for elective laparotomy. The subjects were divided accidentally into two groups, each of which included 75 patients. Technique of anesthesia was similar in all of them (TIVA technique).Then we administered paracetamol (4 gr/24hr) in group 1 and morphine (maximum dose 10mg) in group2.after the end of surgery the visual analog scale(VAS) for postoperative pain evaluation in several time was performed. This evaluation was performed by a member of research team not involved in the study. Any patient complaining of pain or VAS≥ 4, 0.03 mg of pethidine was injected and if needed, the same dose was repeated till the patient was free of pain. The total dose and number of doses injected was recorded. Results. The analysis was performed on the complete data of 150 patients (75 in paracetamol group and 75 in morphine group). Mean age of the study population was 54±15.45 years, which was comparable 150 between groups. The data analysis showed both groups were similar in regard to age, sex, duration of surgery. The pain score in paracetamol group and morphine group was meaningful in first 8 hours after operation (p value=0.00).but after 12 hours of the study, the evaluations of pain were similar in both groups (p value=0.14). In both groups the Visual analog scale pain intensity scores were lower than 3 after 8 hour. The total dose of rescue drug (pethidine) and number of doses injected shown a meaningful difference in the above group (p value =0.00). The cumulative doses of pethidine were significantly differences in both groups (morphine versus paracetamol) over the study period but degree of sedation of all patients was generally mild in both groups. During the 24 hours of the study, the evalua- Vol. 79 - Suppl. 1 to No. 3 tions of pain were similar in both groups, except at 8 hours. This showed that pain scores were significantly lower for patients receiving morphine. (P=0.00) The nausea, vomiting and itching showed a meaningful difference in two groups (P value =0.034, p value =0.00). No patient had a respiratory rate <10 breaths/ min during the study period and no late complications were reported. Postoperative interviews with both patient groups before hospital discharge showed a high level of satisfaction. More patients in the paracetamol group felt that their postoperative analgesia was excellent or good as compared with that of the morphine group. Percutaneous disc decompression for lumbar pain, what is new? Al-Ali Salah Dubai Bone and Joint Center, Sheikh Mohammed Bin Rashid Al Maktoum Academic Medical Centre Dubai, United Arab Emirates Chronic low back pain is a major public health problem in industrialized societies and ranks first among all musculoskeletal disorders resulting in serious morbidity and financial loss. Approximately 70%-85% of all humans experience back pain at some point in their lives. Lumbar disc bulging, protrusion, or extrusion account for less than 5% of all low back problems, but are the most common causes of nerve root pain and surgical interventions . Although surgical correction was made possible to some extent, the high incidence of complications frustrates both patients and physicians. To avoid risk and complications from open surgery, a number of techniques have been developed that are applicable to the treatment of lumbar disc herniation. Most techniques for disc decompression utilize coblation, laser, and physical aspiration, chemical or thermal methods. These approaches have been designed either to shrink or remove disc material believed to be causing lumbar pain and/ or radiculopathy. Generally, these procedures are proven to have low complication and high success rates and it seems to be very cost effective. We will review the literature to find out the most recent applicable disc decompression proce- MINERVA ANESTESIOLOGICA 73 POSTERS dures and its evidence based clinical usability, limitations and efficacy. Also we will highlights the current ongoing studies in this field, like cell based therapies using mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs) to produce nucleus pulposus cells and matrix. Epidural steroid use in Northern Ireland. Are we missing the point? ter selective transforaminal block: the role of corticosteroids. Spine J 2004;4:468-74. 4. Fitzgibbon DR et al. Chronic pain management: American Society of Anesthesiologists Closed Claims Project. Anesthesiology 2004;100:98-105. Radiofrequency pain treatment in hip and knee osteoarthritis patients unsuitable for surgery Rory Maguire Belfast Trust, Mater Hospital, Belfast, United Kingdom Claudio Baldi, Vincenzo Tagariello) Background. Epidural steroids are commonly used to help manage chronic and subacute spinal pain. Recent guidelines have recommended tenets of good practice when administering such injections.1 The use of fluoroscopic guidance has been advocated to ensure correct needle placement and spread of injectate. Incorrect needle placement rate is unacceptably high with standard loss of resistance techniques.2 Furthermore, particulate steroids have been associated with rare but catastrophic side effects with inadvertent intravascular injection.3 Methods. All consultants working in NHS pain management clinics across Northern Ireland were surveyed with regard to their practice of epidural steroid injection. Results. In total, 16 consultants were surveyed. A response rate of 13/16 (81%) was achieved. All 5 hospital trusts were represented. The majority of consultants (69%) do not use fluoroscopy routinely for epidural steroid placement. Particulate steroids are the main therapeutic agent (92%). Almost 40% of consultants do not consent patients for the off label use of this medication. Conclusions. Epidural steroid administration is common practice. Incorrect steroid placement denies therapeutic benefit and may confer serious risk. High litigation rates are associated with this procedure4. Fluoroscopic guidance and/or use of non-particulate steroids should be considered by practitioners to protect their patients, and themselves. Background. Osteoarthritis (OA) is a major cause of pain in hip and knee joints, the most effective treatment being surgical joint replacement. The majority of these Pts are in older age groups, so that is not infrequent in this setting to face individuals with severe organ failure (i.e. cardiac, respiratory, metabolic) who are unsuitable for surgery, due to unacceptable high risk. Conventional medical pain therapies (i.e. opioids, NSAIDs, steroids) have also the risk of worsening ,in such fragile Pts, an already unstable condition and, moreover, are often given so cautiously to become substantially useless. RF use has been postulated as effective in treating pain arising in hip joint (1).Initial reports have been published about RF in these conditions (2,3,4)- We therefore decided to apply Radiofrequency (RF) treatment at knee or hip joint in a small number of Pts suffering from severe pain and who had been judged unfit for replacement surgery. Methods. During the period Jan-Jun 2012 we have treated 10 ASA IV Pts with painful OA of the hip or knee joint. The mean age was 76.4 y.o. (range 68-87). 4 were Male and 6 Female; 4 had their hip affected and 6 the knee). All had a VAS>7 when enrolled, showing a poor efficacy of medical therapy (all of them had NSAIDs and paracetamol, 4 were also on chronic opiates, 2 were taking additional steroids). RF for the hip was done as follows: Pt supine, fluoroscopy in A-P projection, POE 1-2 cm lateral to the femoral artery, needle advanced in an oblique external direction; targets were: sensitive branches of obturator and femoral nerves innervating respectively the inferior and the superior border of the hip joint(1). Following positive sensitive and negative motor stimulation, 2 ml of 0.5% ropivacaine were injected. Then a continuous RF lesioning was applied at 80°C for 72 sec on each nerve. RF for knee was done as follows: Pt supine, knee flexed at 45°, Ultrasound guide; Targets were: geni- References 1. Faculty of Pain Medicine (RCOA). Recommendations for good practice in the use of epidural injection for the management of pain of spinal origin in adults. April, 2011. 2. Bartynski WS et al. Incorrect needle position during lumbar epidural steroid administration: Inaccuracy of loss of air pressure resistance and requirement of fluoroscopy and epidurography during needle insertion. American Journal of Neuroradiology 2005;26:502-5. 3. Tiso RL et al. Adverse central nervous system sequelae af- 74 Ospedale S Pietro, Fatebenefratelli, Rome, Italy MINERVA ANESTESIOLOGICA March 2013 POSTERS colate branch of common peroneal nerve(GBCP) and terminal sensitive branches of the femoral nerve( TBFN) innervating the patella. GBCP was treated with 4 cycles of pulsed RF at 42°C for 120 sec. TBFN were treated by ablative RF at 80°C for 72 sec on 1 or 2 points, following sensitive stimulation and patient’s response. Results. Follow-up was made at 2 weeks and 3 months. VAS was reduced from an average of 7.2 to 4.0 (2wks) and to 3.0 (3 mo) in the knee Pts. VAS for hip Pts was 9.0 at starting, and fell to 6.0 (2 wks) and to 3.5 (3 mo) when considering only 3 Pts, the fourth reporting no benefit at all. Discussion. RF, both pulsed and ablative, showed to improve VAS on 9/10 Pts we enrolled and the results were maintained for at least 3 months. As all were high surgical risk Pts, RF gave them the chance of a better QoL, without the hazards associated with an aggressive medical management. Should these very initial results be confirmed by larger studies and RCTs , RF lesioning of the peripheral sensitive rami on the hip/knee joint, could also serve as a bridge therapy for those waiting surgery or who want to postpone it. Non-contact optical photoplethysmography imaging technique make safe decisions before neurotomy or neurolysis Iveta Golubovska 1, Aleksejs Miscuks 1, Mikhails Arons 2, Uldis Rubins 3 University of Latvia, Faculty of Medicine 1Hospital of Traumatology and Orthopaedics, Riga, Latvia 2Pain Clinics Dap, Riga Stradina University, Riga, Latvia 3Institute of Atomic Physics and Spectroscopy University of Latvia, Riga, Latvia Background and aims. The goal of our research was to find safe quantitative method for monitoring the quality of sympathetic block during the invasive treatment of neuropathic pain: lumbar radiofrequency neurotomy or neurolysis. Methods. The sympathetic block at lumbar III level under X-ray control in AP and LL views with a contrast was performed. Local anaesthetic (LA) Lidocaine 100 mg/8 ml was injected. The photoplethysmography (PPG) have used green spectral band of backscattered radiation for detection of amplitude of blood volume pulsations in skin upper layers. The data of modification amplitude of blood volume pulsations was analyzed “online”. After increasing of PPG signal more than two times we considered the sympathetic block is successful. Vol. 79 - Suppl. 1 to No. 3 Results. The blood flow obtained by reflection PPG increases immediately after LA injection. Changes of PPG amplitude confirm it. Verification of changes in the skin blood flow and PPG signal amplitude after LA input on 16 patients was averaged (R = 0.96, P< 0.0001); on each patient (R=0.8±0.14, P< 0.0001). The sympathetic block absence was detected when the PPG signal amplitude not increased or was inside of a region of +/- standard deviation evaluated in one minute interval. In the case of “successful” sympathetic block the average PPG amplitude before the start of the manipulation is 0.25±0.04; with a -95% confidence interval it is 0.17; with a +95% confidence interval it is 0.33; the ±95% average feasibility interval is 0.08. In the case of “successful” sympathetic block the average PPG amplitude at the end of the measurement is 0.86±0.07; with a -95% confidence interval it is 0.71; with a +95% confidence interval it is 0.99; the ±95% average feasibility interval is 0.14. Conclusions. The new imaging phothopletismograpy technique, based on inexpensive components gives additional quantitative, online, contactless, radiation free method which may be used for sympathetic block confirmation at any conditions. Ultrasound guided costovertebral canal block: a novel approach for ipsilateral analgesia of the trunk Satoh Yutaka Department Of Anesthesia, Tsugaru Seihokugo Region Union Seihoku Chuo Hospital, Goshogawara, Japan Background and aims. There is increasing interest on thoracic paravertebral block for ipsilateral analgesia for breast or thoracic endoscopic surgery. However, this procedure has several limitations: The risk of pneumothorax, epidural or subarachnoid block, and the patients under anticoagulant therapy. The aim of this study is to investigate the spread of local anesthetics injected in the costovertebral canal (CVC) just above the lamina of thoracic vertebra. Methods. With written informed consent, ten patients who underwent ipsilateral breast surgery were scheduled to receive CVC block for postoperative analgesia. Patients with any degenerative or pathological change in vertebral MINERVA ANESTESIOLOGICA 75 POSTERS column on admission were excluded from the study. The patients are laid in lateral decubitus position, under ultrasound guidance, a mixture of 10ml of 0.375% Ropivacaine and 10ml of contrast media was injected just above the midpoint of lamina of 3rd thoracic vertebra. Radiographic studies were conducted at after 5ml, 10ml, 15ml and 20ml of cumulative volume injections. In two cases, Rt. to Lt. view image were taken in spine position. Results. In all ten cases, the injected fluid were distributed within the costovertebral canal, mean average 3:7, dominantly caudad. In two cases in Rt. to Lt view image, contrast media suggested spread into paravertebral space after 30 minutes of injection. Conclusions. This preliminary results suggest that the spread of anesthetics to intercostal nerves, hence ipsilateral analgesia of the trunk may be expected. Further anatomical and clinical studies are warranted to compare the quality of analgesia with conventional thoracic paravertebral block. Relevance of Cytochrome p450 determination (genotype and phenotype) for analgesic efficacy or resistance in a multidisciplinary pain center Victoria Rollason 1, Kuntheavy Ing Lorenzini 1, Caroline Samer 1, Youssef Daali 1, Marie Besson 2, Valérie Piguet 2, Monica Escher 2, Pierre Dayer 1, Jules Alexandre Desmeules 1 1Clinical Pharmacology and Toxicology University Hospitals of Geneva, Geneva, Switzerland 2Clinical Pharmacology and Toxicology, Multidisciplinary Pain Center, University Hospitals of Geneva, Geneva, Switzerland Background. Since 2005, the Geneva University Hospitals offer the possibility of several genotyping and/or phenotyping tests. The Multidisciplinary Pain Center offers an assessment of intractable and chronic pain where patients are evaluated by different experts. Individualised multidisciplinary therapeutic programs are provided, including medication treatments adapted to specific phenotype and/or genotype. The results of these tests are systematically interpreted by our Division of Clinical Pharmacology and Toxicology. The objective of this analysis was to evaluate the data obtained after genotyping and/or phenotyping the patients seen in our pain consultations as to the type of patients, the reasons leading to these 76 consultations, the drugs involved and the relevance of these tests. Methods. Since 2005, 345 patients were evaluated by our division after being genotyped and/or phenotyped, of which 145 (42%) where pain patients. Genotyping tests relevant for analgesic treatments were CYP2C9, CYP2C19, CYP2D6, Pgp and COMT and were available either by traditional PCR or Amplichip® CYP450 (Roche, Basel). Phenotyping tests were done using a cocktail specific probe approach and allowed simultaneous testing of CYP1A2, 2C9, 2C19, 2D6 and 3A4/5. This approach was developed by our clinical pharmacology laboratory and uses caffeine as a probe to test the activity of CYP1A2, flurbiprofen for CYP2C9, omeprazole for CYP2C19, dextromethorphan for CYP2D6 and midazolam for CYP3A4/5. Except for omeprazole, all of these probes were given in microdoses.1 Results. Mean age of patients was 57 years old (from 11 months to 99 years old) and 66% were females. The main reason for geno and/or phenotyping was the occurrence of an unexpected adverse drug reaction in 69% of patients. Other reasons were analgesic resistance (19%) and exploration of the genotype and/or the phenotype as a prediction before prescribing an analgesic (10%). Some of these tests were also done to try and explain an infra- ou supratherapeutic drug concentration, especially for antidepressants. Fifty-one percent of the drugs in these evaluations were those that need to be bioactivated by CYP2D6 into an active metabolite (tramadol, codeine and oxycodone). Other drugs were opioids (21%), antidepressants (15%) and NSAIDs (8%). Patients evaluated had complaints with more than one analgesic drug in 54% of the cases. Twenty-seven percent of these patients were simultaneously geno- and phenotyped. The primary reason for evaluation by our consultation was explained by geno and/or phenotype in the majority (65%) of the cases. Conclusion. Pain patients often suffer from adverse drug reactions and/or inefficacy of their analgesic treatment. Geno- and/or phenotyping tests can help to explain the adverse drug reactions or the resistance to treatment that occur when trying to treat these patients. Patients taking “prodrug” analgesics, that need to be bioactivated by CYP2D6 to exert their efficacy, take benefit from genotyping and phenotyping tests because they seem especially prone to adverse drug reactions and inefficacy of their treatment and sometimes even experience both. MINERVA ANESTESIOLOGICA March 2013 POSTERS This analysis highlights the potential usefulness of both genotype and phenotype tests to better understand adverse drug reactions or unexplained resistance to analgesic treatment. Impacts of high concentration of ropivacaine in second stage of labour during epidural analgesia Silvia Poma, Federica Broglia, Maria Ciceri, Elisa Domenegati, Marinella Fuardo, Silvano Noli, Simona Pellicori, Filippo Repossi, Debora Sportiello, Silvia Zizzi, Marcella Ilardi, Dario Bugada, Barbara Pistone, Maria Paola Delmonte, Giorgio Iotti Anestesia e Rianimazione 2, IRCCS Policlinico San Matteo, Pavia, Italy Background and aims. Maternal pain changes throughout labor especially during the second stage where higher concentration of local anesthetic for epidural analgesia are required. The aim of this study was to assess how epidural analgesia with high ropivacaine concentration affects obstetric outcomes (second stage duration and mode of delivery), maternal outcomes (free mobility during labor, satisfaction) and neonatal outcomes (apgar, arterial ph). Methods. A total of 213 [Group A (107); Group B (96)] singleton uncomplicated pregnancies above 36 weeks of gestational age during second stage of labor were retrospectively compared. Ropivacaine 0.1% and 0.15-0.2% (top up) were respectively administered to Group A and Group B. Maternal, obstetric characteristics and dose of ropivacaine (Group A mean: 20,9 mg, Group B mean: 21,5 mg) did not differ among the groups. Obstetric and neonatal outcomes were reviewed from hospital database. Maternal satisfaction and mobility during labor have been investigated with a questionnaire after delivery. Results. The results are summarized in Table I. Conclusions. High concentrations of Ropivacaine during epidural analgesia seem to increase duration of second stage of labor but don’t affect obstetric outcomes and reduce the rate of inadequate maternal pain relief, appearing to be safe for neonates. Ayx1: a single-dose intrathecal dna-decoy for the prevention of acute and chronic postsurgical pain Julien Mamet Mamet 1, Donald Manning 1, Scott Harris 1, William Schmidt 2, Klukinov Michael 3, David Yeomans 3 1Adynxx, Inc, N/a, San Francisco, United States 2Northstar Consulting, N/a, Davis, United States 3Stanford University, Stanford University, Stanford, United States Background and aims. Persistence of pain following surgery compromises clinical recovery. AYX1 is a DNA-decoy drug candidate designed to prevent post-surgical pain with a single intrathecal dose. Following an injury, the transcription factor EGR1 rapidly triggers broad and ongoing waves of pain-related gene regulation in the dorsal root ganglia and dorsal horn, leading to long-term sensitization and pain. AYX1 is an EGR1-decoy (an Table I. Duration of ii stage Minutes (mean;sd) Limited mobility during ii stage (%) Mode of delivery Vaginal delivery rates (%) Operative vaginal delivery rates (%) Cesarean section rates (%) Maternal satisfaction Good (%) Sufficient (%) Inadequated (%) Apgar score 1 Minute (mean;sd) 5 Minute (mean;sd) Neonatal arterial ph (mean;sd) Vol. 79 - Suppl. 1 to No. 3 Ropivacaine 0,1% Group a (107) Ropivacaine 0,15%- 0,2% Group b (96) P 53,35 (33,42) 20 67,48 (43,48) 13 0.009 Ns 80,5 17,7 1,8 88,6 8,3 3,1 Ns Ns Ns 81,4 11,1 7,5 84,8 15,2 0 0,01 9,24 (1,16) 9,77 (1,04) 7,29 (0,09) 9,13 (1,63) 9,85 (0,57) 7,28 (0,08) Ns Ns Ns MINERVA ANESTESIOLOGICA 77 POSTERS oligonucleotide and potent, specific inhibitor of EGR1 activity) working by mimicking the genomic EGR1-binding sequence. These studies evaluate (1) AYX1 spectrum of efficacy across animal models of pain representing the range of injuries associated with surgery, (2) its pharmacokinetics and (3) safety in animals. Methods. AYX1 was delivered as a 0.02mL (rat, Sprague Dawley) or 1mL (dog, Beagle) bolus intrathecal injection. Efficacy was measured using von Frey hairs, weight bearing incapacitance or spontaneous rearing. Models of inflammatory (CFA), incisional (Brennan), neuropathic (spared nerve) injury or knee surgery in rats were performed as previously described. CSF and plasma were collected via catheter or percutaneously for pharmacokinetic measures. N ~ 5-10 for efficacy, N ~ 3 for pharmacokinetics and N ~ 6-16 for toxicity. Results. AYX1 dose-dependently prevents ongoing mechanical hypersensitivity with no observed effects upon motor function. Analysis of spontaneous pain-related behaviors demonstrated that AYX1 also accelerated functional recovery. AYX1 exposure was high in lumbar CSF and low in plasma (~3-5 orders of magnitude lower) with a half-life of ~3 hours in CSF and <10 min in plasma. There was an absence of toxicity up to maximum feasible dose. Conclusion. This work illustrates AYX1 therapeutic potential for improving acute and preventing persistent pain and accelerating recovery after surgery or trauma. These data and excellent safety results in a recent Phase 1 clinical study in healthy volunteers allow the initiation of a proof-of-concept Phase 2 study in surgical subjects. Magnesium sulphate as a novel treatment in resistant tic douloureux paroxysmal facial pain. TN pain typically remits and relapses, even when patients are on conventionally used treatments, resulting in a major source of disability and poor quality of life. In this study we present a patient with TN who was intractable to carbamazepine, and was treated successfully by intravenous magnesium sulphate. Case presentation. We describe a 65-year-old man who was admitted to Emergency medicine Department suffering from typical TN pain on the right side of his face for 7 years. He used medications, including baclophen (10 mg per day) and carbamazepine (1200 mg per day). The pain was triggered by speaking, eating or touching. The pain was evaluated using a visual analog scale (VAS), which ranged from 0 (no pain) to 10 (worst pain imaginable). According to the VAS, the patient rated his pain as 10.We administered intravenous magnesium sulphate 30 mg / kg over 30 min (the required amount was added as a 50% magnesium sulphate solution to 100 ml of saline). The severity of pain was recorded using a numeric VAS at baseline and at 10, 20 and 30 min during the infusion. The VAS score obviously decreased from 10 to 2 before and 30 minutes after receiving the mentioned treatment, respectively. Conclusion. We have presented a short-lived but simple, inexpensive, low-risk, and effective technique for treating pain associated with intractable TN. Magnesium could be expected to modulate neuropathic pain by blocking the NMDA receptor calcium ionophore. Parenteral magnesium sulphate can reduce pain dramatically or subtly. The effect of low level laser therapy on knee osteoarthritis: prospective, descriptive study Hassan Soleimanpour 1, Rouzbeh Rajaei Ghafouri 1, Dawood Aghamohammadi 1, Saeid Safari 2, Karim Marjani 3, Maryam Soleimanpour 4 , Mahsa Motavaf 2 1Emergency Medicine Department Tabriz University of Medical Sciences, Tabriz, Iran 2Department of Anesthesiology and Pain Medicine Tehran University of Medical Sciences, Tehran, Iran 3Nikookari Hospital, Tabriz University of Medical Sciences Tabriz, Iran 4Gastroenterology Research Center Tabriz University of Medical Sciences, Tabriz, Iran Hassan Soleimanpour 1, Khosro Gahramani 2, Reza Taheri 2, Saeid Safari 3, Samad Ej Golzari 4, Robab Mehdizadeh Esfanjani 5, Mahsa Motavaf 3 1Emergency Medicine Department Tabriz University of Medical Sciences, Tabriz, Iran 2Iranian Medical Laser Association Iranian Medical Laser Association, Tehran, Iran 3Department of Anesthesiology and Pain Medicine Tehran University of Medical Sciences, Tehran, Iran 4Cardiovascular Research Center Tabriz University of Medical Sciences, Tehran, Iran 5Neurosciences Research Center Tabriz University of Medical Sciences,, Tabriz, Iran Background and aim. Trigeminal neuralgia (TN), also called tic douloureux is a neuropathic pain syndrome characterized by severe unilateral Background and aims. Osteoarthritis is one of the most common joint disorders in the elderly which could be associated with considerable phy- 78 MINERVA ANESTESIOLOGICA March 2013 POSTERS Table II.—VAS (Visual Analogues Scale). 1st session 6th session 12th session P-value VAS 7.39±1.68 3.61±1.91 2.22±1.7 <0.0001 Knee 41.5±4.03 40.63±3.37 40±3.63 <0.0001 Circumference (cm) Distance 19.83±9.26 13.83±9.33 12.8±8.61 <0.0001 Between Hip And Heel (cm) Distance 5.23±1.92 4.00±1.26 3.5±0.94 <0.0001 Between Knee And Heel (cm) sical disability. Although non-steroid anti-inflammatory drugs are broadly used for the treatment of the pain and rigidity caused by osteoarthritis, their undesirable gastrointestinal complications have contributed to numerous limitations in their administration. To reduce or eliminate these complications different approaches including ultrasound, transcutaneous electrical nerve stimulation (TENS) and physical exercises have been utilized. Vol. 79 - Suppl. 1 to No. 3 Methods. In a prospective, descriptive study, 33 patients enrolled in the study from which 15 people were excluded due to incomplete course of treatment, leaving the total number of 18 patients with knee osteoarthritis. Gal-Al-As diode laser device was used as a source of low power laser. Patients were performed laser therapy with a probe of LO7 with a power output of 80 watts, and also a probe of MLO1K with a power output of 50 watts, wave length of 890 nm and frequency of 3000 Hz. patients were given Low Level Laser Therapy (LLLT) three times a week with a total number of 10 sessions. Data were analyzed using SPSS ver. 15 and the obtained data were reported as mean ± SD and frequency (%). To analyze the data Repeated Measurement and Marginal Homogeneity approaches were used. Results. In the current study, a significant reduction was observed regarding the nocturnal pain, pain on walking and ascending the steps, knee circumference, the distance between hip and heel and the distance between knee and heel at the end of treatment course (Table I). Conclusions. In brief, the current study focuses on the fact that LLLT is effective in reducing pain in knee osteoarthritis. MINERVA ANESTESIOLOGICA 79