Four studies (published January 2004 – June 2006) compared conventional NSAIDs with placebo or no treatment in abdominal hysterectomy
No change to recommendations
Three studies (published January 2004 – June 2006) compared cCOX-2-Selective Inhibitors with placebo in abdominal hysterectomy
See Pre-operative or Postoperative, Systemic analgesia sections for full details of studies and new recommendations
Three studies (published January 2004 – June 2006) compared Alpha-2-Agonists (oral clonidine or dexmedetomidine) with placebo in abdominal hysterectomy
Systemic clonidine: no change to recommendation Dexmedetomidine: limited data, so not recommended at the current time
Three studies (published January 2004 – June 2006) investigated the use of strong opioid in abdominal hysterectomy
Three studies (published January 2004 – June 2006) compared tramadol with placebo in abdominal hysterectomy
No change to recommendation
Two studies (published January 2004 – June 2006) investigated the use of spinal strong opioids in abdominal hysterectomy
One study showed that no significant differences in analgesic efficacy were observed between pre-operative or intra-operative spinal adenosine and control (no treatmnet) following abdominal hysterectomy
One study (published January 2004 – June 2006) compared IV droperidol with no treatment in abdominal hysterectomy
Not recommended for pain relief due to limited procedure-specific evidence (although droperidol has proven effects on nausea and vomiting)
Two studies (published January 2004 – June 2006) investigated the used of antihistamine in abdominal hysterectomy
Not recommended due to limited evidence of analgesic efficacy
One study (published January 2004 – June 2006) compared beta-blockers with placebo in abdominal hysterectomy
Not recommended because of limited evidence of analgesic efficacy
Three studies (published January 2004 – June 2006) investigated the use of wound instillation or infusion with local anaesthetic in abdominal hysterectomy
Single bolus wound instillation
Not recommended currently due to limited procedure-specific evidence
Continuous wound infusion
PCA wound infusion
One study (published January 2004 – June 2006) investigated the use of IP conventional NSAID and IP weak opioid in combination with IP LA in abdominal hysterectomy
Two studies (published January 2004 – June 2006) investigated the use of epidural analgesia in abdominal hysterectomy
Five studies (published January 2004 – June 2006) investigated the effect of different surgical techniques on pain scores after hysterectomy
Two studies showed that abdominal laparoscopic hysterectomy significantly reduced pain scores compared with abdominal hysterectomy (Garry 2004; Garry 2004). One study showed that laparoscopic hysterectomy significantly reduced pain scores compared with abdominal hysterectomy (Learman 2004). One study showed that vaginal hysterectomy significantly reduced pain compared with abdominal hysterectomy (Silva 2006)
Vaginal hysterectomy studies:
Further data are required before any changes can be made to the recommendations
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