4.4 Article

Opioid free anesthesia: evidence for short and long-term outcome

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MINERVA ANESTESIOLOGICA
卷 87, 期 2, 页码 230-237

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EDIZIONI MINERVA MEDICA
DOI: 10.23736/S0375-9393.20.14515-2

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Analgesics; opioid; Adjuvants; pharmaceutic; Anesthesia

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The historical use of synthetic opioids in anesthesia has been reevaluated, with a shift towards opioid-free anesthesia (OFA) for better perioperative outcomes. OFA combines various drugs and techniques to provide effective analgesia with fewer opioid-related side effects, showing promising results. Further research is needed to determine the long-term effects and optimal approach for each patient, but interest in OFA is growing.
The introduction of synthetic opioids in clinical practice played a major role in the history of anesthesiology. For years, anesthesiologists have been thinking that opioids are needed for intraoperative anesthesia. However, we now know that opioids (especially synthetic short-acting molecules) are definitely not ideal analgesics and may even be counterproductive, increasing postoperative pain. As well, opioids have revealed important drawbacks associated to poor perioperative outcomes. As a matter of fact, efforts in postoperative pain management in the last 30 years were driven by the idea of reducing/eliminating opioids from the postoperative period. However, a modern concept of anesthesia should eliminate opioids already intra-operatively towards a balanced, opioid-free approach (opioid-free anesthesia - OFA). In OFA drugs and techniques historically proven for their efficacy are combined in rational and defined protocols. They include ketamine, alpha-2 agonists, lidocaine, magnesium, anti-inflammatory drugs and regional anesthesia. Promising results have been obtained on perioperative outcome. For sure. analgesia is not reduced with OFA, but it is effective and with less opioid-related side effects. These benefits may be of particular importance in some high-risk patients, like OSAS, obese and chronic opioid-users/abusers. OFA may also increase patient-reported outcomes; despite it is difficult to specifically rule out the effect of intraoperative opioids. Finally, few data are available on long-term outcomes (persistent pain and opioid abuse, cancer outcome). New studies and data are required to elaborate the optimal approach for each patient/ surgery, but interest and publication arc increasing and may open the road to the wider adoption of OFA.

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