Korean J Anesthesiol Search

CLOSE


Korean Journal of Anesthesiology 2001;40(1):47-53.
DOI: https://doi.org/10.4097/kjae.2001.40.1.47   
Effects of Intravenous and Epidural Patient-Controlled Analgesia on Postoperative Pain and Knee Rehabilitation after a Unilateral Total Knee Replacement.
Jeong Seon Han, Soo Kyung Park, Myung Sin Suh, Eun Sook Yoo, Sook Young Lee, Byung Hyun Min, Bong Ki Moon
1Departments of Anesthesiology, Ajou University School of Medicine, Suwon, Korea.
2Departments of Orthopedic Surgery, Ajou University School of Medicine, Suwon, Korea.
Abstract
BACKGROUND
Postoperative pain is a major concern after a total knee replacement (TKR). It hinders early intense physical therapy, the most influential factor for good postoperative knee rehabilitation. The purpose of this study was to compare intravenous patient-controlled analgesia (IV-PCA) using morphine and continuous ketorolac IV infusion with patient-controlled epidural analgesia (PCEA) using morphine and continuous bupivacaine infusion in terms of analgesic efficacy and postoperative knee rehabilitation after a unilateral TKR.
METHODS
Eighteen patients undergoing a unilateral total knee replacement were randomly allocated to one of the two groups. In group IV-PCA (n = 9), 30 min before the end of surgery, patients received ketorolac 30 mg IV bolus followed by continuous infusion with ketorolac (5 mg/h) and IV-PCA with morphine (20microgram/kg, lockout 10 min). In group PCEA (n = 9), 30 min before the end of surgery, patients received 2 mg morphine bolus followed by continuous infusion with 0.1% bupivacaine (2 ml/h) and PCEA with morphine (1 mg, lockout 15 min).
RESULTS
There were significant differences in visual analogue scale scores at the first 2-hours after the unilateral TKR, cumulative morphine consumption and number of postoperative days required to obtain 90o knee flexion.
CONCLUSIONS
PCEA using a morphine-bupivacaine combination provided better pain relief and faci litated the continuous passive motion more than IV-PCA using a morphine-ketorolac combination. This results in possible faster postoperative knee rehabilitation.
Key Words: Analgesia: pain; patient-controlled; postoperative; Analgesics: epidural; intravenous; ketorolac; morphine; Anesthetics, local: bupivacaine; Surgery: total knee replacement; rehabilitation


ABOUT
ARTICLE CATEGORY

Browse all articles >

BROWSE ARTICLES
AUTHOR INFORMATION
Editorial Office
101-3503, Lotte Castle President, 109 Mapo-daero, Mapo-gu, Seoul 04146, Korea
Tel: +82-2-792-5128    Fax: +82-2-792-4089    E-mail: journal@anesthesia.or.kr                

Copyright © 2024 by Korean Society of Anesthesiologists.

Developed in M2PI

Close layer
prev next