Pharmacological Management
Assessment of Pain
Non-pharm. Management
Side Effects
Potpourri
100

Adaptation to a drug causing withdrawal when the drug is stopped

Physical dependence

100

Acronym used for a thorough pain assessment

PQRSTUV

100

The use of electrical current through electrodes to reduce pain

TENS (transcutaneous electrical nerve stimulation)

100

An expected side effect of opiods that does NOT decrease with time

Constipation

100

The 2 types of pain that people experience

Nociceptive

Neuropathic

200

Preferred route of drug administratino for chronic pain

Oral (as long as functioning GI) or transdermal

200

Most important vital sign to assess before administering an opioid

Respiratory rate

200

2 “physical” interventions for pain management

Massage, exercise, Heat / cold, acupuncture,

200

Medication used to reverse respiratory depression related to narcotics use

Naloxone

200

An appropriate pain scale for use with a 5 year old

Faces pain scale

300

Type of drug therapy you would expect when patient rates pain as 3/10

non-opiods  (e.g. NSAIDs, Tylenol)

300

Three criteria on the opiod risk assessment tool

Family hx of substance abuse

Personal hx of substance abuse

Age (16 – 45)

Hx of preadolescent sexual abuse

Psychological disease

300

The use of local anesthetics to interrupt transmission of nociceptive input and prevent pain

Nerve blocks

300

Antiemetics are used to treat these two common side effects

Nausea and vomiting

300

The generalized itchy feeling that some people on opiods get

Pruritis

400

4 types of patients requiring special consideration for opioid use

Older adults (>65) 

Compromised renal and hepatic function

Pregnant women 

Pts with sleep disorders / obstructive sleep apnea 

Pts with depressed mood or anxiety 

Substance abuse

Adverse health behaviours (e.g. tobacco use, alcohol use, obesity, substance abuse history)

400

What the 2 item chronic pain scale assesses

Pain intensity (scale of 0 – 10)

Pain interference (how interfered with daily activities – scale of 0 – 10)

400

3 “psychological” interventions for pain management

CBT, music, distraction, relaxation, education, energy flow

400

Increased HR & BP, pupillary dilation, anxiety, goose bumps and jittery behaviour are signs of this

Opioid withdrawal

400

3 barriers to pain management

Fear of addiction, fear of tolerance, concern about adverse events, desire to be a good pt, desire to be stoic, forgetting to take meds, concern that pain signifies disease progression, fear of distracting the health care provider from treating the disease, sense of fatalism, ineffectiveness of medication

500

3 adjuvant medications used to manage pain

Antidepressants 

Antiseizure 

Muscle relaxants

Cannabinoids

Psychostimulants

Anesthetics

500

What the FLACC tool assesses in children

Facial expression

Leg movement

Activity

Cry

Consolability

500

2 “self-management” strategies for pain management

Energy conservation, pacing, sleep promotion, relaxation, communication skills, safe exercise – goals are set to increase functional capacity and emotional well being

500

3 adverse effects of opioid use that diminish with time

Sedation

Nausea 

Urinary retention

500

3 important points to include when health teaching someone about opiod use

Dosing, stopping the med, side effects, not to take sedative drugs, how to get rid of unused meds