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Home > Patient-controlled analgesia


 

Patient-controlled analgesia (PCA) is any method of allowing a person in pain to adminster their own pain relief.

1 General use

The most common form of this is the paracetamol that many keep in their bathroom cabinet. If a complaint, e.g. a headache, does not resolve with a small dose of painkiller then more may me taken up to a maximum dose. This situation has the patient in control, as is in fact the most common patient-controlled analgesia. As pain is a combination of tissue damage and emotional state, being in control means reducing the emotional component of pain.

2 Hospital use

PCA has passed into medical jargon to mean the electronically controlled infusion pump that delivers a prescribed amount of intravenous or epidural analgesic to the patient when he or she activates a button.

Opioids are the medication most often administered through PCAs.

2.1 Benefits

Among the benefits of this device are:

2.2 Disadvantages

Disadvantages are:

Anesthesia

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