Dental Pain Management - Luzerne County Dental Society
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Transcript Dental Pain Management - Luzerne County Dental Society
Dental Pain Management
Thomas Franko, PharmD, BCACP
Assistant Professor Pharmacy Practice
Wilkes University
Luzerne County Dental Society
January 20th, 2014
Objectives
Describe the pain pathway and how it
relates to dental care
Develop a care plan using opioid
medication
Understand the difference between
NSAIDs and Tylenol
Select appropriate follow up plan for a
patient
What You Think
Available at: http://www.featurepics.com/online/DentistHappy-Patient-703697.aspx
Available at: http://dentainment.com/11-marketing-ideas-for-your-dentalpractice/
What They Think
Available at: http://www.artofhustle.com/2013/03/10-things-i-wish-iknew-before-working-at-art-nonprofits/
Available at:
http://www.woodminster.com/Webpages/PhotoGalleries/2013/
LittleShop030313.html
What is Pain
“An unpleasant sensory and
emotional response associated
with actual or potential tissue
damage or described in terms of
such damage.”
"Part III: Pain Terms, A Current List with Definitions and Notes on Usage" (pp 209-214) Classification of Chronic Pain, Second Edition, IASP Task
Force on Taxonomy, edited by H. Merskey and N. Bogduk, IASP Press, Seattle, ©1994.
Current Recommendations
Based on case studies and studies but
nothing formal
Structured around use of NSAIDs,
Acetaminophen and Opioids
Recommend around the clock treatment
for 48 hours post procedure then as
needed
◦ Pain peaks 48 hours post procedure
Weinberg M, Fine J. Oral Analgesics for Acute Dental Pain. Dentistry Today. 2002 June. Available at: http://www.dentistrytoday.com/painmanagement/1566
Burgess J, Meyers A. Post Procedural Pain Management. In Pain Management in Dentistry. Medscape. 2012 Feb. Available at:
http://emedicine.medscape.com/article/2066114-overview#aw2aab6c10
The Pain Pathway
Available at: http://medical-dictionary.thefreedictionary.com/nociception
The Pain Pathway
Brain
Spine
NSAIDs &
Acetaminophen
Mouth
NSAIDs
Analgesic, antipyretic and antiinflammatory properties
Naproxen, Ibuprofen and Diclofenac have
been found to reduce pain by almost 50%
Avoid long term use due to increased risk
of GI and renal issues
Caution with patients on warfarin due to
increased bleeding risk
Burgess J, Meyers A. Post Procedural Pain Management. In Pain Management in Dentistry. Medscape. 2012 Feb. Available at:
http://emedicine.medscape.com/article/2066114-overview#aw2aab6c10
NSAID Selection
GI
Renal
Platelet
Cardiac
COX 1
COX 2
Ketorolac
Celecoxib
Selective COX 2 Inhibitors: Are They Safer NSAIDs. Therapeutics Initiative. 6 Feb 2001. Available at: http://www.ti.ubc.ca/pages/letter39.htm
Clinical Pearls
Be aware of other medications and
disease states
◦ GERD, PUD
◦ ACE inhibitors and ARBs
◦ Verify a medication record prior to adding any
new medications
Patients should take with food
Be aware of patients who are brdiging
warfarin therapy
Aspirin
Anti-inflammatory properties at very high
doses
Irreversible inhibition of COX
◦ Other NSAIDs are transient
More profound effects on platelet
function and GI irritation
◦ Not the best option in many surgical cases
Weinberg M, Fine J. Oral Analgesics for Acute Dental Pain. Dentistry Today. 2002 June. Available at: http://www.dentistrytoday.com/painmanagement/1566
Acetaminophen
Not an NSAID
◦ No inflammatory properties
Recommended if patient is taking other
medications contraindicated with NSAIDs
Can be used with NSAID for additional
benefit
◦ Moore P, et al. showed Ibuprofen +
Acetaminophen worked better than either
alone
Moore P, Hersh E. Combining ibuprofen and acetaminophen for acute pain management after third-molar extractions. JADA. 2013 Aug 1; (144): 898908. Available at: http://jada.ada.org/content/144/8/898
Weinberg M, Fine J. Oral Analgesics for Acute Dental Pain. Dentistry Today. 2002 June. Available at: http://www.dentistrytoday.com/painmanagement/1566
Acetaminophen
Caution with unintentional overdose
◦ Acetaminophen is in EVERYTHING
Combination opioid medications
Over the counter cough and cold products
Max dose is 4 grams daily
Toxic mid-metabolites can cause hepatic
failure
Perez M, et al. Acetaminophen Overdose. Medline Plus. 22 March 2013. Available at: http://www.nlm.nih.gov/medlineplus/ency/article/002598.htm
Acetaminophen Overdose
Available at: http://www.fda.gov/ohrms/dockets/ac/02/briefing/3882b1_13_mcneil-acetaminophen.htm
The Pain Pathway
Brain
Opioids
Spine
NSAIDs &
Acetaminophen
Mouth
Opioids
12% of opioids prescribed come from
dentists
Should only be provided for a short
period of time
Caution in patients with history of drug
abuse and/or alcohol abuse
Refer patient to pain management, rehab
or psychological services if needed
Weinberg M, Fine J. Oral Analgesics for Acute Dental Pain. Dentistry Today. 2002 June. Available at: http://www.dentistrytoday.com/painmanagement/1566
Burgess J, Meyers A. Post Procedural Pain Management. In Pain Management in Dentistry. Medscape. 2012 Feb. Available at:
http://emedicine.medscape.com/article/2066114-overview#aw2aab6c10
Opioids
Use if patient does not have adequate
pain relief with NSAIDs or
Acetaminophen
Opioid/NSAID or Opioid/Acetaminophen
recommended over pure opioid
◦ Results in lower doses and less adverse
effects
Codeine/Acetaminophen,
Hydrocodone/Acetaminophen,
Oxycodone/Acetaminophen
Weinberg M, Fine J. Oral Analgesics for Acute Dental Pain. Dentistry Today. 2002 June. Available at: http://www.dentistrytoday.com/painmanagement/1566
Hydrocodone/Acetaminophen
2011 FDA requests no more than 325 mg
acetaminophen in combination Rx forms
◦ Expected completion by Jan 2014
◦ Not all manufacturers complied
Brand name Vicodin currently at 300 mg
acetaminophen regardless of hydrocodone dose
◦ PA law permits generic substitution at pharmacies
◦ Generic versions have various acetaminophen
strengths available
◦ Must express desire for 300 mg formulation
U.S. Food and Drug Administration. FDA limits acetaminophen in prescription combination products; requires liver toxicity warnings. 2011 Jan 13.
Available at: http://www.fda.gov/NewsEvents/Newsroom/PressAnnouncements/ucm239894.htm
Abbieve. Dosing and Administration. Appearance of AbbVie’s Reformulated Vicodin Tablets. Available at: http://www.vicodin.com/hcp/vicodindosing-administration
Opioids
Short acting opioids are preferred
◦ Limited duration of therapy
◦ Lower risk of opioid induced respiratory
depression/overdose vs. long acting
Abuse is possible; clinician responsible to
prescribe appropriately
◦ Policy statement from American Dental
Association
Weinberg M, Fine J. Oral Analgesics for Acute Dental Pain. Dentistry Today. 2002 June. Available at: http://www.dentistrytoday.com/painmanagement/1566
American Dental Association. Statement on the use of opioids in the treatment of dental pain. 2005 Oct. Available at:
http://www.ada.org/7578.aspx
Opioids
Adverse effects
◦ Constipation, respiratory depression,
euphoria, fatigue
◦ Tolerance will develop to everything except
constipation
Recommend use of stool softener/laxative
combination to help
◦ Mush and push
◦ Stool softeners can be used daily
◦ Laxatives should be used as needed
Levy M. Management of Opioid-Induced Side Effects. Medscape. Available at: http://www.medscape.org/viewarticle/573016
Goodheart C, Leavitt S. Managing Opioid Induced Constipation in Ambulatory Care Patients. Pain Treatment Topics. 2006 Aug. Available at:
http://pain-topics.org/pdf/Managing_Opioid-Induced_Constipation.pdf
Opioids and Chronic Pain
Patients with existing chronic opioid use
Will need higher doses of opioids than
opioid naïve patients
◦ Maybe up to 2 times as much
Initiate discussion with primary care
provider
◦ Both for collaboration as well as determining
presence of med use agreements
Requires a more in depth assessment and
more care in prescribing
Gordon D. Acute Pain Management in the Opioid-Tolerant Individual. Medscape Nurses. 2008. Available at:
http://www.medscape.org/viewarticle/581948
Chronic Post Procedure Pain
Look for other causes
◦ Infection, ENT issues
Consider possible nerve/neuropathic
involvement
◦ Burning, numbing, electric, shooting pain
Referral to pain management as needed
Burgess J, Meyers A. Chronic Postprocedural Pain. In Pain Management in Dentistry. Medscape. 2012 Feb. Available at:
http://emedicine.medscape.com/article/2066114-overview#aw2aab6c10
Summary
Review the medication record first
Be aware of drug-drug and drug disease
interactions
Around the clock therapy for 48 hours
then as needed
NSAIDs and Acetaminophen first
Short term use of short acting opioids if
needed
Communicate with primary care
Questions
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