Pain Management
Applies to: Patient presents with a painful condition that would benefit from treatment with an analgesic. This
includes DNR/MOLST patients and patients being pre-medicated for a painful procedure.
Exclusion Criteria: Medication specific hypersensitivity/allergy. Active Labor.
History to consider
- Age
- Location
- Duration
- Severity (1 - 10)
- If child use Wong-Baker faces scale
- Past medical history
- Medications
- Drug allergies
Signs and Symptoms to note
- Severity (Pain scale)
- Quality
- Radiation
- Relation to movement
- Respirations
- Reproducible
- Increased upon palpation
Differentials to consider
- Per the specific protocol
- Musculoskeletal
- Visceral (abdominal)
- Cardiac
- Pleural/ Respiratory
- Neurogenic
- Renal (colic)
Pearls
- Do not administer Acetaminophen to patients with history of liver disease or known to have consumed large amounts of ETOH.
- Fentanyl, Morphine and Ketamine should be reserved for acute pain.
- For patients in Moderate pain for instance, you may use the combination of an oral medication and parenteral if no contraindications are present.
- Ketamine
- May use Ketamine in combination with opioids to limit total amount of opioid administration
- Avoid in patients who have cardiac disease or uncontrolled hypertension.
- Avoid in patients with increased intraocular pressure such as glaucoma.
- Avoid use in combination with benzodiazepines due to depressed respiratory drive
Navigate
References
Protocols
- Nausea / Vomiting
Pharmacology
- Fentanyl Citrate
- Morphine
- Ketamine
- Acetaminophen
- Ofirmev
- Ibuprofen
Procedures
- Vascular Access
- Pain Assessment
1 Comment
Under mild pain, it reads like we can give both PO and IV acetaminophen. Can we clarify this?