A narrative review on pain control interventions for non-surgical pleural procedures

Pleural diseases are common and frequently result in disabling symptoms, impaired health-related quality of life and hospitalisation. Both diagnosis and management often require pleural procedures and despite a variety of pain control strategies available for clinicians to employ, many procedures ar...

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Veröffentlicht in:Respiratory medicine 2023-02, Vol.207, p.107119-107119, Article 107119
Hauptverfasser: Du, Ann, Hannan, Liam, Muruganandan, Sanjeevan
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Pleural diseases are common and frequently result in disabling symptoms, impaired health-related quality of life and hospitalisation. Both diagnosis and management often require pleural procedures and despite a variety of pain control strategies available for clinicians to employ, many procedures are still complicated by pain and discomfort. This can interfere with procedure success and can limit patient satisfaction. This review examines the evidence for pain control strategies for people undergoing non-surgical pleural procedures. A systematic literature search was undertaken to identify published studies examining different pain control strategies including pharmacological (sedatives, paravertebral blocks, erector spinae blocks, intrapleural anaesthesia, epidural anaesthesia, local anaesthetic, methoxyflurane, non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs [NSAIDs], opioids) and non-pharmacological measures (transcutaneous electric nerve stimulation [TENS], cold application and changes to the intervention or technique). Current literature is limited by heterogeneous study design, small participant numbers and use of different endpoints. Strategies that were more effective than placebo or standard care at improving pain included intrapleural local anaesthesia, paravertebral blocks, NSAIDs, small-bore intercostal catheters (ICC), cold application and TENS. Inhaled methoxyflurane, thoracic epidural anaesthesia and erector spinae blocks may also be useful approaches but require further evaluation to determine their roles in routine non-surgical pleural procedures. Future research should utilise reliable and repeatable study designs and reach consensus in endpoints to allow comparability between findings and thus provide the evidence-base to achieve standardisation of pain management approaches. •Pain is a common complication of non-surgical pleural procedures.•Intrapleural anaesthetics provide effective analgesia for intercostal catheter insertion.•Small-bore intercostal catheters cause less pain than large-bore intercostal catheters.•Paravertebral blocks with long-acting local anaesthetics improve pain outcomes for medical thoracoscopy.•Non-steroidal anti-inflammatories are effective and does not reduce pleurodesis efficacy.
ISSN:0954-6111
1532-3064
DOI:10.1016/j.rmed.2023.107119