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Abstract Summary he pediatric population is at risk of inadequate pain management. Children are often given minimal or no analgesia for procedures that would routinely be treated aggressively in adults. The myth that infants and children do not feel pain, or suffer less from it than adults can lead to under treatment of pain in children as they are unable to use words that adequately express their discomfort. Non pharmacologic approaches for the treatment of pain in children include psychological strategies, education and parental support. For children undergoing repeated painful procedures, cognitive-behavioral therapy interventions, which decrease anxiety and distress, can be quite effective. As regarding pharmacological agents, acetaminophen is the most commonly used analgesic agent in pediatric practice. It is the mainstay for mild to moderate pain, and is often combined with opioid analgesics for patients with more severe pain (Except in the newborn period), the pharmacodynamics and pharmacokinetics of the NSAIDs in children are not much different than in adults. Children appear to have a lower incidence of renal and GIT side effects than adults even with chronic administration. For the vast majority of children, opioids provide excellent analgesia with a wide margin of safety. As a result, they may develop apnea or periodic breathing after receiving continuous opioid infusion. Patient T Summary 114 controlled analgesia (PCA) is widely used for postoperative pain relief in children as young as 5 years of age whom can independently use the PCA pump to provide good postoperative pain relief. For younger children, Nurse controlled analgesia has recently gained popularity to permit small titrated dosing of opioids for infants and children unable to use the PCA button. A number of new topical anesthetics have recently become widely available to provide pain relief prior to the many anticipated needle-stick procedures as Eutectic mixtures of local anesthetics. Also starting pain treatment pre-operativley (Pre-emptive analgesia) is a new approach in management of post-operative pain management. Ultrasound guided regional anesthetic techniques are commonly used in children to decrease general anesthetic requirements and aid in postoperative pain management. Continuous epidural analgesia via indwelling catheters can provide excellent postoperative analgesia for infants and children of all ages undergoing more extensive abdominal and lower extremity procedures. Other regional blocks also can be used for pain management in all ages. Multimodal analgesia techniques using combinations of local anesthetics, no steroidal anti-inflammatory agents and opioids provide optimal analgesia. |