This study was published in 2011 and they gave patients Pregabalin, also known as Lyrica, to see how much opioids the pts would need. They got 150mg before the surgery and then 75mg twice a day until post-op day 5. The main drawback is how it delayed the time to extubation. I don’t know if I am interpreting the data correctly but patients on Pregabalin were on the vent for about 2 hours longer than those not on it. Perhaps the 150mg 1 hour before the surgery was too much. Either way, as noted on the abstract slide, it reduced the post-op consumption of opioids by 44-48%. That’s a big win.
Do you all routinely use Pregabalin or Gabapentin for pain management at your institutions? I’m going to go through more data on this topic in the upcoming week.
-EJ

Link to Abstract
Link to FULL FREE Article
Pesonen A, Suojaranta-Ylinen R, Hammaren E, Kontinen VK, Raivio P, Tarkkila P, Rosenberg PH. Pregabalin has an opioid sparing effect in elderly patients after cardiac surgery: a randomized placebo-controlled trial. Br J Anaesth 2011;106:873–81
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