Neuroleptanalgesia for acute abdominal pain: a systematic review
Date
2019-02-26
Access
Authors
Miller, Andrew C
Khan, Abbas M
Bigalli, Alberto A Castro
Sewell, Kerry A
King, Alexandra R
Ghadermarz, Shadi
Mao, Yuxuan
Zehtabchi, Shahriar
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Abstract
Background: Acute abdominal pain (AAP) comprises up to 10% of all emergency department (ED) visits. Current pain management practice is moving toward multi-modal analgesia
regimens that decrease opioid use.
Objective: This project sought to determine whether, in patients with AAP (population), does
administration of butyrophenone antipsychotics (intervention) compared to placebo, usual care,
or opiates alone (comparisons) improve analgesia or decrease opiate consumption (outcomes)?
Methods: A structured search was performed in Cochrane CENTRAL, CINAHL, Database of
Abstracts of Reviews of Effects, Directory of Open Access Journals, Embase, IEEE-Xplorer,
Latin American and Caribbean Health Sciences Literature, Magiran, PubMed, Scientific Information Database, Scopus, TÜBİTAK ULAKBİM, and Web of Science. Clinical trial registries
(ClinicalTrials.gov, World Health Organization International Clinical Trials Registry Platform,
and Australian New Zealand Clinical Trials Registry), relevant bibliographies, and conference
proceedings were also searched. Searches were not limited by date, language, or publication
status. Studies eligible for inclusion were prospective randomized clinical trials enrolling
patients (age ≥18 years) with AAP treated in acute care environments (ED, intensive care unit,
postoperative). The butyrophenone must have been administered either intravenously or intramuscularly. Comparison groups included placebo, opiate only, corticosteroids, non-steroidal
anti-inflammatory drugs, or acetaminophen.
Results: We identified 7,217 references. Six studies met inclusion criteria. One study assessed
ED patients with AAP associated with gastroparesis, whereas five studies assessed patients with
postoperative AAP: abdominal hysterectomy (n=4), sleeve gastrectomy (n=1). Three of four studies
found improvements in pain intensity with butyrophenone use. Three of five studies reported no
change in postoperative opiate consumption, while two reported a decrease. One ED study reported
no change in patient satisfaction, while one postoperative study reported improved satisfaction
scores. Both extrapyramidal side effects (n=3) and sedation (n=3) were reported as unchanged.
Conclusion: Based on available evidence, we cannot draw a conclusion on the efficacy or
benefit of neuroleptanalgesia in the management of patients with AAP. However, preliminary
data suggest that it may improve analgesia and decrease opiate consumption.
Description
Citation
DOI
10.2147/JPR.S187798