Postoperative Pain and Opioid Use Following Lower-Limb Escharectomy and Skin Grafting Under a Standardized Regional Anesthesia Protocol: A Retrospective Study
Francesco Coppolino, Francesco Coletta, Antonio Tomasello, Pasquale Rinaldi, Maria Rosaria Cavezza, Romolo Villani, Francesca Schettino, Ilaria Mataro, Antonio Scalvenzi, Caterina Aurilio, Pasquale Sansone, Maria Caterina Pace, Vincenzo Pota

TL;DR
A standardized regional anesthesia protocol effectively reduced postoperative pain and opioid use in burn patients undergoing lower-limb surgery.
Contribution
Demonstrates the effectiveness of regional anesthesia in minimizing opioid use and improving pain control in burn surgery.
Findings
32% of patients reported no pain (NRS 0) after surgery.
Only 16% of patients required rescue opioids.
No severe pain (NRS 7–10) was reported, and no readmissions occurred within 30 days.
Abstract
Background: Pain management in patients with severe burns remains one of the most complex challenges in perioperative care. Burn-related pain is multifactorial, resulting from tissue destruction, intense inflammation, surgical procedures, and repeated dressing changes. Opioids remain the cornerstone of analgesia; however, prolonged use is associated with tolerance, dependence, adverse effects, and prolonged hospitalization. Multimodal and opioid-sparing strategies, including regional anesthesia, may improve postoperative outcomes by enhancing analgesia while reducing systemic drug exposure. This study aimed to evaluate the effectiveness of a standardized regional anesthesia protocol in reducing postoperative pain and opioid requirements in burn patients undergoing lower-limb escharectomy and autologous skin grafting. Methods: We conducted a retrospective, single-center analysis of 25…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAnesthesia and Pain Management · Burn Injury Management and Outcomes · Pediatric Pain Management Techniques
