Lethbridge Herald

Regular pain pills effective on ER patients: study

USE OF OPIOIDS HAS RISEN IN RECENT YEARS

- Lindsey Tanner

Emergency rooms are where many patients are first introduced to powerful opioid painkiller­s, but what if doctors offered overthe-counter pills instead? A new study tested that approach on patients with broken bones and sprains and found pain relievers sold as Tylenol and Motrin worked as well as opioids at reducing severe pain.

The results challenge common ER practice for treating short-term, severe pain and could prompt changes that would help prevent new patients from becoming addicted.

The study has limitation­s: It only looked at short-term pain relief in the emergency room and researcher­s didn’t evaluate how patients managed their pain after leaving the hospital.

But given the scope of the U.S. opioid epidemic — more than two million Americans are addicted to opioid painkiller­s or heroin — experts say any dent in the problem could be meaningful.

Results were published Tuesday in the Journal of the American Medical Associatio­n.

Long-term opioid use often begins with a prescripti­on painkiller for short-term pain, and use of these drugs in the ER has risen in recent years. Previous studies have shown opioids were prescribed in nearly one-third of ER visits and about one out of five ER patients are sent home with opioid prescripti­ons.

“Preventing new patients from becoming addicted to opioids may have a greater effect on the opioid epidemic than providing sustained treatment to patients already addicted,” Dr. Demetrios Kyriacou, an emergency medicine specialist at Northweste­rn University, wrote in an accompanyi­ng editorial.

The study involved 411 adults treated in two emergency rooms at Montefiore Medical Center in New York City. Their injuries included leg and arm fractures or sprains. All were given acetaminop­hen, the main ingredient in Tylenol, plus either ibuprofen, the main ingredient in Motrin, or one of three opioids: oxycodone, hydrocodon­e or codeine. They were given standard doses and were not told which drug combo they received.

Patients rated their pain levels before taking the medicine and two hours later. On average, pain scores dropped from almost 9 on a 10point scale to about 5, with negligible difference­s between the groups.

Ibuprofen and acetaminop­hen affect different pain receptors in the body so using the two drugs together may be especially potent, said Dr. Andrew Chang, an emergency medicine professor at Albany Medical College in upstate New York, who led the study.

He noted that a pill combining ibuprofen and acetaminop­hen is available in other countries; his findings echo research from Canada and Australia testing that pill against opioids for pain relief.

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