The postoperative prescription and administration of analgesics following cardiac surgery for 50 children were compared with those of 50 adults. Six children were the only patients in the sample who were prescribed no postoperative analgesics. Overall, children were prescribed significantly fewer potent narcotics. The administration data revealed even more pronounced group differences. During the observation period, children received 30% of all analgesic administrations while adults received 70%. Some possible reasons for these age differences in analgesic usage are presented, and implications regarding the adequacy of postoperative pain control in children are discussed.
This study examined concurrent self-reports of pain intensity and behavioral responses in 25 children aged 3-7 yr. Behavioral (Children's Hospital of Eastern Ontario Pain Scale, CHEOPS) and self-report (the Oucher and Analogue Chromatic Continuous Scale) measures of pain were obtained following major surgery. The two self-report measures were strongly and significantly correlated, and the pattern of scores over the 36-hr observation period was as expected. There was little relationship between the scores for the self-report and the behavioral measures. Many children who reported severe pain manifested few of the behavioral indicators of distress used in the CHEOPS. This behavioral response pattern may occur commonly in children experiencing pain after surgery and may limit the applicability of current behavioral scales as sole measures of pain intensity in younger children.
A descriptive, longitudinal design was used to examine changes in current, worst, and least pain intensity during hospitalization for a vaso-occlusive episode in children with sickle cell disease. Other dimensions of the pain experience including location and quality were also evaluated. Children reported severe pain on the day of admission with 50% of the episodes showing a current pain intensity score of >70 and a worst pain intensity score of >80. Although both pain intensity scores demonstrated statistically significant decreases by approximately 5% over the course of the hospitalization, these decreases were not clinically significant based on the recommendations made in the American Pain Society's Guideline for the management of acute and chronic pain in sickle cell disease. In contrast to the pain intensity ratings, which did not decrease in 25% of the episodes, pain location surface area decreased in 100% of the episodes. Children described the quality of vaso-occlusive pain using all categories of word descriptors from the adolescent pediatric pain tool. These findings suggest that pain associated with a vaso-occlusive episode is inadequately assessed and managed during hospitalization.
PAS occurs relatively often among patients of an endocrinological centre, with a 3:1 female to male ratio. Because there is usually a long interval between the onset of the various endocrine diseases, regular monitoring of patients with an endocrine autoimmune disease is indicated, specific tests to be performed if additional immune diseases are suspected.
The purpose of this study was to describe the pain experience of children with sickle cell disease who were hospitalized for vaso-occlusive painful episodes. The pain experience, and signs and symptoms prior to admission and during hospitalization, are presented in the context of whether there is evidence to support the existence of phases to a vaso-occlusive painful episode. Children were interviewed about the onset of the painful episode and were asked to describe their pain from the day of admission to the day of discharge from the hospital. They were also observed for the absence or presence of signs and symptoms associated with the painful vaso-occlusive episode. Findings from this study provide some evidence to support previous observations related to changes during the evolution of painful episodes that may be occurring in phases (e.g., evolving, inflammatory, resolving), as previously described in adults and children. These phases had different names, although the concepts were similar.
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