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Prehospital Analgesia: Systematic Review of Evidence

The purpose of this systematic review is to investigate current evidence for analgesic use in the prehospital environment using expert military and civilian opinion to determine the important clinical questions. There was a high degree of agreement that pain should be no worse than mild, that pain r...

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Published in:BMJ military health 2010-12, Vol.156 (Suppl 4), p.S295-300
Main Authors: Park, CL, Roberts, DE, Aldington, DJ, Moore, RA
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Language:English
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cited_by cdi_FETCH-LOGICAL-b302t-6f563e141be63c66c78fd75d951919326e14b3f2a10a806a96c73ac66a77a66a3
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container_issue Suppl 4
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container_title BMJ military health
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creator Park, CL
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description The purpose of this systematic review is to investigate current evidence for analgesic use in the prehospital environment using expert military and civilian opinion to determine the important clinical questions. There was a high degree of agreement that pain should be no worse than mild, that pain relief be rapid (within 10 minutes), that patients should respond to verbal stimuli and not require ventilatory support, and that major adverse events should be avoided. Twenty-one studies provided information about 6,212 patients; the majority reported most of the outcomes of interest. With opioids 60-70% of patients still had pain levels above 30/100 mm on a Visual Analogue Scale after 10 minutes, falling to about 30% by 30-40 minutes. Fascia iliaca blocks demonstrated some efficacy for femoral fractures. No patient on opioids required ventilatory support; two required naloxone; sedation was rare. Cardiovascular instability was uncommon. Main adverse events were dizziness or giddiness, and pruritus with opioids. There was little evidence regarding the prehospital use of ketamine.
doi_str_mv 10.1136/jramc-156-04s-05
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source BMJ journals (British Medical Journal and others)
subjects Adult
Analgesia - methods
Emergency Medical Services - methods
Evidence-Based Medicine
Humans
title Prehospital Analgesia: Systematic Review of Evidence
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