STS 2023 Day 1 — Avoiding unnecessary perioperative opioids remains imperative, and today’s “Contemporary Operative Pain Management” session is essential for surgeons to glean the latest opioid-sparing approaches to pain management.
The session will be presented on Saturday, January 21, at 11 a.m. PT and is moderated by Daniel Engelman, MD, from Baystate Medical Center, professor of surgery at the University of Massachusetts Chan Medical School in Springfield, Massachusetts, and Alison Ward, MD, from Emory Healthcare, assistant professor of surgery at Emory University School of Medicine in Atlanta, Georgia.
“This session will be a truly multidisciplinary session drawing from the expertise of surgeons, anesthesiologists, and physiotherapists to discuss optimizing post-operative pain management,” Dr. Ward says.
Acute, post-operative pain from heart surgery is inevitable and can result from a variety of causes. However, there is a growing concern regarding the incidence of new, persistent opioid use following cardiac surgery, which research has shown may still happen in up to 15 % of patients.
The session will showcase alternative approaches to opioid-based analgesia for pain control that also facilitates patient mobility. These include multimodal analgesia involving more than one class of medication to target different receptors along the pain pathway. In addition, the rapidly expanding options in regional anesthesia for cardiothoracic surgery, such as nerve blocks, will be discussed for integration into the overall pain management plan.
The Contemporary Operative Pain Management session includes six presentations:
- New Persistent Opioid Use After Cardiac Surgery
- Sternotomy Without Mobility Restrictions
- Does Surgical Approach Impact Postoperative Pain?
- Cardiac Surgery Without Opioids
- Non-Pharmaceutical Approaches to Pain Management
- Panel Presentation with Open Audience Discussion
Dr. Engelman is President of the Enhanced Recovery After Surgery Cardiac Society and Senior Perioperative Editor of The Annals of Thoracic Surgery. He says he especially looks forward to the open exchange of ideas during the panel portion of the session.
STS 2023 attendees will bring novel approaches to pain management back to their institutions, broadening their pain control strategies and employing new techniques that can decrease or even end the root causes of their patients’ pain and symptoms, as well as reduce length of hospital stay.