Pain Assessment & Principles - Ouch Meter!
⭐ Pain is the "Fifth Vital Sign". Prompt assessment & management are critical in emergencies.
- Define Pain: Unpleasant sensory/emotional experience associated with actual/potential tissue damage.
- Types: Nociceptive (somatic, visceral), Neuropathic (nerve injury).
- Assessment Tools:
- 📌 PQRST mnemonic: Provocation/Palliation, Quality, Region/Radiation, Severity, Timing.
- Scales: Numeric Rating Scale (NRS 0-10), Visual Analog Scale (VAS), Wong-Baker FACES (children), FLACC (non-verbal).

- Stepwise Analgesia (WHO Ladder Adaptation):
- Principles: Treat early, use multimodal approach (combine drug classes), titrate to effect.
Non-Opioid Analgesics - Gentle Giants
- Paracetamol (PCM)
- MOA: CNS prostaglandin inhibitor.
- Use: Pain, fever.
- Dose: 1g q6h (Max 4g/day).
- ⚠️ Hepatotoxic: >10g or >150mg/kg.
- NSAIDs (Non-Steroidal Anti-Inflammatory Drugs)
- MOA: COX inhibition.
- Use: Pain, inflammation.
- CI: Peptic ulcer, renal/HF, asthma, 3rd trim preg.
- SE: GI bleed, renal tox, CV risk. 📌 No ulcers, Sticky blood, Asthma, Impaired renal, During pregnancy (avoid 3rd trim).
- Examples (Max daily):
- Ibuprofen: 400-600mg q6h (2.4g).
- Diclofenac: 50mg q8h (150mg).
- Ketorolac: 15-30mg IV q6h (120mg, ≤5 days).
- Mefenamic Acid: 250-500mg q8h (1.5g).
⭐ Ketorolac: Opioid-level analgesia (renal colic); use ≤5 days (GI/renal risk).
Opioid Analgesics - Mighty Morphers
Mechanism: Bind to μ (primary), κ, δ opioid receptors in CNS & periphery, modulating pain perception. For severe acute pain.
- Key Opioids (IV Route in ER):
- Morphine: Gold standard. Onset 5-10min, duration 3-4h.
- Fentanyl: Potent (80-100x Morphine). Onset 1-2min, duration 30-60min.
- Pethidine: Less potent than Morphine. Risk of norpethidine toxicity (seizures), esp. renal failure. (75-100mg IM ≈ Morphine 10mg IM).
- Side Effects (SE): Respiratory depression (monitor!), N/V, sedation, constipation, miosis. 📌 MORPHINES (common side effects).
- Reversal: Naloxone 0.4-2mg IV, repeat q2-3min (max 10mg). Titrate to reverse respiratory depression, not analgesia.
⭐ > Fentanyl's rapid onset and short duration make it ideal for procedural sedation and analgesia.

Local Anesthesia & Blocks - Numb Zone
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Mechanism: Reversibly block $Na^+$ channels in nerve membranes, inhibiting action potential propagation.
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Common ER Blocks: Digital nerve block (fingers/toes), dental blocks (inferior alveolar), wound infiltration for suturing, hematoma blocks for fracture reduction.
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Key Agents:
Agent Onset Duration Max Dose (Plain) Max Dose (+Adrenaline) Notes Lidocaine Rapid Mod (1-2h) 4.5mg/kg 7mg/kg Versatile, common Bupivacaine Slower Long (4-8h) 2mg/kg 2.5mg/kg Potent, ↑cardiotoxicity risk -
LA Systemic Toxicity (LAST):
- Early: Tinnitus, metallic taste, perioral numbness.
- 📌 SAMS: Slurred speech, Altered CNS (agitation, drowsiness), Muscle twitching, Seizures.
- Severe: Arrhythmias, cardiovascular collapse.
- Management: Stop LA, ABCs (airway, O2), IV Benzodiazepines for seizures.
⭐ Lipid emulsion therapy (Intralipid 20%) is the specific antidote for severe LAST, especially with Bupivacaine.

Adjuncts & Special Cases - Tricky Treats
- Ketamine: Dissociative analgesia.
- Sub-dissociative (pain): 0.1-0.3 mg/kg IV.
- Procedural sedation: 1-2 mg/kg IV.
⭐ Sub-dissociative dose ketamine provides effective analgesia without significant psychomimetic side effects or respiratory depression.
- Nitrous Oxide (N₂O): Rapid inhalational analgesia (e.g., Entonox 50:50).
- Adjuvants: Benzodiazepines (muscle spasm); Antiemetics (nausea).
- Special Populations:
- Pediatrics: Strict weight-based dosing; paracetamol preferred.
- Geriatrics: ↓ doses (polypharmacy, ↓ metabolism).
- Pregnancy: Paracetamol safe; NSAIDs avoid (3rd trimester).
High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways
- Opioids (morphine, fentanyl) for severe acute pain; monitor respiratory depression.
- NSAIDs (ketorolac) for mild-moderate pain (musculoskeletal); risk GI bleed, renal injury.
- Paracetamol for mild-moderate pain & as adjunct; hepatotoxicity in overdose.
- Low-dose ketamine: potent analgesia without respiratory depression; ideal for trauma.
- Regional nerve blocks: targeted pain relief, reduce systemic opioid needs.
- Nitrous oxide: rapid analgesia/anxiolysis for short painful procedures.
- Always assess pain score (VAS) and reassess post-intervention_._
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