A Comparison of the Safety and Effectiveness of Two Forms of Patient-controlled Pain Medication Used After Scheduled Abdominal or Pelvic Surgery: The Fentanyl Transdermal System Versus the Morphine Intravenous Pump
Pain, Postoperative
About this trial
This is an interventional treatment trial for Pain, Postoperative focused on measuring Postoperative pain, patient-controlled analgesia
Eligibility Criteria
Inclusion Criteria: Patients with a pre-operative American Society of Anesthesiology Physical Status I, II, or III (Class I are healthy persons less than 80 years of age, Class II are patients over age 80 years of age with mild systemic disease, and Class III are patients with severe and non-incapacitating disease) Admitted to the Post-Anesthesia Care Unit after general anesthesia or spinal/epidural anesthesia using short-acting agents Having had one of these surgical procedures: small and large bowel resections with anastomosis, colectomy, enterolysis, sigmoidectomy, closure of enteric fistulae, repair of cecal or sigmoid volvulus, lower anterior resection, stoma closure, bariatric surgery, liver resection, splenectomy, gastrectomy, fundoplication, total abdominal hysterectomy, total vaginal hysterectomy, anterior-posterior repair, oophorectomy, or myomectomy and cystectomy Awake and breathing spontaneously with a respiratory rate of 8 to 24 breaths per minute and oxygen saturation of 90% or higher (with or without supplemental oxygen) Expected to remain hospitalized for at least 24 hours postoperatively Exclusion Criteria: Patients whose postoperative pain would normally be managed with oral or non-narcotic pain medication Who received long-acting intraoperative epidural, spinal anesthesia, or local anesthetics in the surgical area, or who are expected to have postoperative analgesia supplied by a continuous regional technique or patient-controlled epidural analgesia Have a history of allergy, hypersensitivity, or tolerance to fentanyl or morphine, have a history of allergy or hypersensitivity to cetylpyridinium chloride or skin adhesives, or have the presence of active skin disease that would interfere with application of the E-TRANS fentanyl system Who received steroids within 1 month before surgery or during surgery Expected to require intensive care postoperatively or who will probably need additional surgical procedures within 72 hours