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. Author manuscript; available in PMC: 2021 Dec 1.
Published in final edited form as: J Perianesth Nurs. 2020 Jul 11;35(6):564–573. doi: 10.1016/j.jopan.2020.03.002

Table 3:

Exemplar of a Perioperative Multimodal Pain Management Plan

Phase Pharmacological plan Rationale
Preoperative Develop patient centered postoperative pain management plan. Set realistic goals.
Tylenol 1000mg PO
Celebrex 300mg PO
Neurontin 150mg PO
Morphine 5mg Intrathecal
Intraoperative Fentanyl – titrate to effect Manage pain intraoperatively with choice of opioid.
Morphine – titrate to effect
Postoperative Opioid rotation from oral opioids to IV morphine The open bowel resection requires the patient to be NPO after the surgery.
1. Patient taking oxycodone 200mg and tramadol 50mg.
 ○ Hydrocodone 120mg daily ➔ 120 × 1= 120mg morphine The conversion of oral morphine to IV morphine is 3:1.
 ○ Oxycodone 30mg daily ➔ 30 × 1.5 = 45mg morphine
 ○ Total MEDD = 120 + 45 = 165 MEDD 27.5mg IV morphine is the baseline rate that will be used to prevent withdrawal and manage chronic pain symptoms.
2. 165mg of oral morphine is equivalent to 55 mg IV morphine.
3. Decrease the dose by 50% due because of incomplete tolerance ➔ (50% of 55mg = 27.5mg).
4. Infuse 27.5 mg over 24 as the basal rate of PCA (27.5/24 = 1.15mg). 1mg IV bolus helps manage acute postoperative pain
 ○ Run baseline PCA at 1 to 1.25mg per hour
 ○ Program 1mg bolus as needed with a 4-hour lock time
Postoperative day 1: Summary of opioid consumption A summary of the last 24 hours opioid consumption is used to determine the discharge opioid requirement.
 - 24mg morphine from the infusion
 - 3 mg in boluses
 - Total daily IV use = 27 mg
Postoperative day 2: Discharge orders The importance of teaching the patient about the need to reduce opioid consumption cannot be overemphasized.
 - Gabapentin 600 mg two times a day
 - Convert IV morphine to oral equivalence ➔ 27 × 3 = 81mg  - Some patients may rationalize their opioid dependence by requesting the same opioid. Good knowledge of pharmacogenetics would enhance patient teaching.
 - 81 mg of oral MEDD ➔ 81/4 = 20mg oral Hydromorphone
 - Hydromorphone extended-release 8 mg by mouth 2 (or 3 depending on assessment) times a days
 - Increasing the dose of non-opioid analgesics should help decrease opioid requirements.

Notes: PCA= patient controlled analgesia; IV = intravenous; NPO = nothing by mouth; MEDD= morphine equivalent daily dose; PO = oral