Abstract

The authors retrospectively compared one surgeon's consecutive abdominoplasty patients over 24 months. The control group received primarily narcotic medications to manage pain, and the treatment cohort was given a multimodal protocol for perioperative analgesia. Demographic data, surgical time, and postanesthesia care unit time between the groups were similar. Although the mean intravenous narcotic decreased in the operating room and postanesthesia care unit for the treatment group, it failed to achieve statistical significance. The treatment cohort was prescribed two-thirds less oral narcotic than the control (251 versus 787 mean morphine milligram equivalents P < 0.001). Ten patients in the treatment cohort used no oral narcotics compared to one in the control (P = 0.002), and only four narcotic refills were given in the treatment group compared to 36 in the control (P < 0.001), suggesting that the treatment group had better pain control despite taking fewer narcotics. Optimally utilizing multimodal medications effectively reduces narcotic consumption while effectively managing postoperative pain from abdominoplasty in a private practice, ambulatory surgery setting. Surgeons must change their prescribing habits if we are going to make progress in the war against the opioid crisis.

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