Efficacy of Sodium Channel-Selective Analgesics in Postoperative, Neuralgia, and Neuropathy-Related Pain Management: A Systematic Review and Literature Review

Postoperative pain is a prevalent problem, often lasting from days to years. To minimize opioid use and associated risks of dependency, Enhanced Recovery After Surgery (ERAS) protocols increasingly incorporate multimodal analgesics. Sodium channel-selective blockers are a promising non-opioid altern...

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Published inInternational journal of molecular sciences Vol. 26; no. 6; p. 2460
Main Authors Brooks, Athena, Hornbach, Anna, Smith, Jade E., Garbaccio, Noelle C., Keller, Nathan, Lemke, Jessica, Foppiani, Jose A., Gavlasova, Dominika, Lee, Theodore C., Buckley, Marie-Claire, Choudry, Umar, Lin, Samuel J.
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LanguageEnglish
Published Switzerland MDPI AG 10.03.2025
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ISSN1422-0067
1661-6596
1422-0067
DOI10.3390/ijms26062460

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Abstract Postoperative pain is a prevalent problem, often lasting from days to years. To minimize opioid use and associated risks of dependency, Enhanced Recovery After Surgery (ERAS) protocols increasingly incorporate multimodal analgesics. Sodium channel-selective blockers are a promising non-opioid alternative, yet their application in postoperative pain remains underexplored. This systematic review evaluates their efficacy in managing postoperative, neuropathic, and neuralgia-related pain. A systematic review was conducted using controlled keywords across multiple databases to identify studies on sodium channel-selective blockers published up to 2024. Eligible studies included clinical trials, observational studies, case series, and reports involving patients aged 18 or older. Data were extracted on therapeutic outcomes, dosages, complications, and comparisons with other analgesics. Five studies met the inclusion criteria, involving 804 patients, 81.58% of whom were women. One study addressed postoperative pain, while the remaining five focused on neuropathy- and neuralgia-related pain. All studies reported significant pain reduction in at least one treatment group compared with placebo. In the study on postoperative pain, the sodium channel-selective blocker significantly reduced pain scores without requiring opioid analgesia. Across all studies, only two patients needed concomitant opioid therapy, and one discontinued treatment due to adverse effects. Dosages varied, with no reports of severe complications. Comparative analyses showed that sodium channel-selective blockers were as effective, if not superior, to traditional pain medications in reducing pain intensity. Sodium channel-selective blockers demonstrate significant potential in pain management with minimal opioid reliance. While effective for neuropathic pain, further studies are essential to validate their role in acute postoperative settings and refine their use in multimodal analgesia regimens.
AbstractList Postoperative pain is a prevalent problem, often lasting from days to years. To minimize opioid use and associated risks of dependency, Enhanced Recovery After Surgery (ERAS) protocols increasingly incorporate multimodal analgesics. Sodium channel-selective blockers are a promising non-opioid alternative, yet their application in postoperative pain remains underexplored. This systematic review evaluates their efficacy in managing postoperative, neuropathic, and neuralgia-related pain. A systematic review was conducted using controlled keywords across multiple databases to identify studies on sodium channel-selective blockers published up to 2024. Eligible studies included clinical trials, observational studies, case series, and reports involving patients aged 18 or older. Data were extracted on therapeutic outcomes, dosages, complications, and comparisons with other analgesics. Five studies met the inclusion criteria, involving 804 patients, 81.58% of whom were women. One study addressed postoperative pain, while the remaining five focused on neuropathy- and neuralgia-related pain. All studies reported significant pain reduction in at least one treatment group compared with placebo. In the study on postoperative pain, the sodium channel-selective blocker significantly reduced pain scores without requiring opioid analgesia. Across all studies, only two patients needed concomitant opioid therapy, and one discontinued treatment due to adverse effects. Dosages varied, with no reports of severe complications. Comparative analyses showed that sodium channel-selective blockers were as effective, if not superior, to traditional pain medications in reducing pain intensity. Sodium channel-selective blockers demonstrate significant potential in pain management with minimal opioid reliance. While effective for neuropathic pain, further studies are essential to validate their role in acute postoperative settings and refine their use in multimodal analgesia regimens.
Postoperative pain is a prevalent problem, often lasting from days to years. To minimize opioid use and associated risks of dependency, Enhanced Recovery After Surgery (ERAS) protocols increasingly incorporate multimodal analgesics. Sodium channel-selective blockers are a promising non-opioid alternative, yet their application in postoperative pain remains underexplored. This systematic review evaluates their efficacy in managing postoperative, neuropathic, and neuralgia-related pain. A systematic review was conducted using controlled keywords across multiple databases to identify studies on sodium channel-selective blockers published up to 2024. Eligible studies included clinical trials, observational studies, case series, and reports involving patients aged 18 or older. Data were extracted on therapeutic outcomes, dosages, complications, and comparisons with other analgesics. Five studies met the inclusion criteria, involving 804 patients, 81.58% of whom were women. One study addressed postoperative pain, while the remaining five focused on neuropathy- and neuralgia-related pain. All studies reported significant pain reduction in at least one treatment group compared with placebo. In the study on postoperative pain, the sodium channel-selective blocker significantly reduced pain scores without requiring opioid analgesia. Across all studies, only two patients needed concomitant opioid therapy, and one discontinued treatment due to adverse effects. Dosages varied, with no reports of severe complications. Comparative analyses showed that sodium channel-selective blockers were as effective, if not superior, to traditional pain medications in reducing pain intensity. Sodium channel-selective blockers demonstrate significant potential in pain management with minimal opioid reliance. While effective for neuropathic pain, further studies are essential to validate their role in acute postoperative settings and refine their use in multimodal analgesia regimens.Postoperative pain is a prevalent problem, often lasting from days to years. To minimize opioid use and associated risks of dependency, Enhanced Recovery After Surgery (ERAS) protocols increasingly incorporate multimodal analgesics. Sodium channel-selective blockers are a promising non-opioid alternative, yet their application in postoperative pain remains underexplored. This systematic review evaluates their efficacy in managing postoperative, neuropathic, and neuralgia-related pain. A systematic review was conducted using controlled keywords across multiple databases to identify studies on sodium channel-selective blockers published up to 2024. Eligible studies included clinical trials, observational studies, case series, and reports involving patients aged 18 or older. Data were extracted on therapeutic outcomes, dosages, complications, and comparisons with other analgesics. Five studies met the inclusion criteria, involving 804 patients, 81.58% of whom were women. One study addressed postoperative pain, while the remaining five focused on neuropathy- and neuralgia-related pain. All studies reported significant pain reduction in at least one treatment group compared with placebo. In the study on postoperative pain, the sodium channel-selective blocker significantly reduced pain scores without requiring opioid analgesia. Across all studies, only two patients needed concomitant opioid therapy, and one discontinued treatment due to adverse effects. Dosages varied, with no reports of severe complications. Comparative analyses showed that sodium channel-selective blockers were as effective, if not superior, to traditional pain medications in reducing pain intensity. Sodium channel-selective blockers demonstrate significant potential in pain management with minimal opioid reliance. While effective for neuropathic pain, further studies are essential to validate their role in acute postoperative settings and refine their use in multimodal analgesia regimens.
Audience Academic
Author Keller, Nathan
Lee, Theodore C.
Garbaccio, Noelle C.
Foppiani, Jose A.
Lin, Samuel J.
Hornbach, Anna
Smith, Jade E.
Lemke, Jessica
Gavlasova, Dominika
Buckley, Marie-Claire
Choudry, Umar
Brooks, Athena
AuthorAffiliation 3 Institute of Clinical and Experimental Medicine, 140 21 Prague, Czech Republic; nika.gavlasova@seznam.cz
1 Department of Surgery, Division of Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, MN 55455, USA; brooksa@umn.edu (A.B.); hornb078@umn.edu (A.H.); kell1879@umn.edu (N.K.); lemke298@umn.edu (J.L.); foppi002@umn.edu (J.A.F.); buckl012@umn.edu (M.-C.B.); choud008@umn.edu (U.C.)
4 Georgetown University, District of Columbia, Washington, DC 78626, USA; teddychinglee@gmail.com
2 Department of Surgery, Division of Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery, Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center, Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA 02215, USA ngarbacc@bidmc.harvard.edu (N.C.G.)
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Snippet Postoperative pain is a prevalent problem, often lasting from days to years. To minimize opioid use and associated risks of dependency, Enhanced Recovery After...
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StartPage 2460
SubjectTerms Analgesics
Analgesics - therapeutic use
Analysis
Care and treatment
Chronic pain
Health aspects
Humans
Lacosamide
Literature reviews
Medical research
Medicine, Experimental
Narcotics
Neuralgia
Neuralgia - drug therapy
Pain
Pain management
Pain Management - methods
Pain, Postoperative - drug therapy
Patients
Recovery (Medical)
Review
Roles
Sodium
Sodium Channel Blockers - therapeutic use
Subject heading schemes
Surgery
Systematic review
Treatment Outcome
Vocabularies & taxonomies
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Title Efficacy of Sodium Channel-Selective Analgesics in Postoperative, Neuralgia, and Neuropathy-Related Pain Management: A Systematic Review and Literature Review
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Volume 26
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