Abstract

Pain relief is a major concern for patients who have undergone surgery, and it is an eternal pursuit for anesthesiologists. However, postoperative pain management is far from satisfactory, though the past decades have witnessed great progress in the development of novel analgesics and analgesic techniques. A Cochrane systematic review showed that patient-controlled analgesia (PCA) achieved better pain relief and greater patient satisfaction than traditional “on-demand” parenteral analgesia, suggesting that it might be the manner of analgesia implementation that matters for effective postoperative pain management. A wireless intelligent PCA (Wi-PCA) system that incorporated remote monitoring, an intelligent alarm, intelligent analysis and assessment of the PCA equipment, as well as automatically recording and reserving key information functions under a wireless environment was introduced in our department in 2018. The practice showed that the Wi-PCA system significantly reduced the incidence of moderate to severe postoperative pain and relevant adverse effects, shortened hospital stays, and improved patient satisfaction with postoperative pain relief. Nevertheless, for both traditional and Wi-PCA, analgesics are only administered when pain occurs, leaving behind a realm of possibilities for better postoperative pain management. With the rapid development of machinery and deep learning algorithms, artificial intelligence (AI) is changing the mode of clinical decision making. Integrating the big data collected by state-of-the-art monitoring sensors, the Internet of Things and AI algorithms, an AI-assisted PCA (Ai-PCA) may be a promising future direction for postoperative pain management.

Highlights

  • Pain is a physical response to harmful stimuli and is currently perceived as a disease rather than a symptom

  • The scenario of pain relief remains unchanged despite the rapid progress in the development of analgesics and the emergence of novel analgesia techniques [2]

  • What is more disappointing is that three national surveys conducted in the United States at ∼10-years intervals showed no improvement—perhaps even worsening—in the management of postoperative pain (Table 1)

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Summary

Introduction

Pain is a physical response to harmful stimuli and is currently perceived as a disease rather than a symptom. All the surveys reported a pessimistically high incidence of moderate to severe pain in patients. Another survey that included 2,293 patients from 17 hospitals in Southwest China suggested that the incidence of acute postoperative moderate to severe pain was 28.8% at rest and 45.1% in motion [13].

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