EP070 Incidence of rebound pain in patients with peripheral nerve block: preliminary observational study

Background and AimsRebound pain is an acute increase in pain severity after a peripheral nerve block (PNB) has worn off, generally manifesting within 24 h after the block performance. This observational study aims to observe the incidence and factors of rebound pain after PNB.MethodsBefore subject e...

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Published inRegional anesthesia and pain medicine Vol. 48; no. Suppl 1; p. A77
Main Authors Atar, Funda, Fatma Özkan Sipahioğlu, Filiz Karaca Akaslan, Aydın, Eda Macit, Sezer, Evginar, Özkan, Derya
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Secaucus BMJ Publishing Group LTD 01.09.2023
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Summary:Background and AimsRebound pain is an acute increase in pain severity after a peripheral nerve block (PNB) has worn off, generally manifesting within 24 h after the block performance. This observational study aims to observe the incidence and factors of rebound pain after PNB.MethodsBefore subject enrollment, the ethics committee approved the study (137/01), and it was registered at ClinicalTrials.gov (NCT03048214). Ortopedia surgery patients who received PNB for anesthesia or analgesia for 10 months were included. Postoperatively, all subjects received multimodal analgesia. Patients were visited at 0, 12, and 24 hours postoperatively and were analyzed for the incidence of rebound pain, numeric rating scale (NRS) pain score, motor and sensory block times. Rebound pain was mainly described as burning, dull aching pain and severe pain (NRS score >7).ResultsIn the preliminary report was enrolled 119 subjects, and the rebound pain rate was 24.3%. Rebound pain is more common in upper extremity blocks (p<0.01). Rebound pain was seen more in PNB applied for anesthesia than in PNB used for analgesia. (p=0.018). Opioid analgesic consumption rates were high during the rebound pain.ConclusionsDespite multimodal analgesia, we think rebound pain can be seen more, especially in upper extremity blocks and when applied for anesthesia.
ISSN:1098-7339
1532-8651
DOI:10.1136/rapm-2023-ESRA.132