Editorial Type:
Article Category: Research Article
 | 
Online Publication Date: Jan 01, 2010

Diversity of Opioid Requirements for Postoperative Pain Control Following Oral Surgery—Is It Affected by Polymorphism of the μ-Opioid Receptor?

DDS, PhD,
MD, PhD,
PhD,
DDS, PhD,
DDS, PhD, and
DDS, PhD
Page Range: 145 – 149
DOI: 10.2344/0003-3006-57.4.145
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Abstract

We experience individual differences in pain and sensitivity to analgesics clinically. Genetic factors are known to influence individual difference. Polymorphisms in the human OPRM1 gene, which encodes the μ-opioid receptors, may be associated with the clinical effects of opioid analgesics. The purpose of this study was to determine whether any of the 5 common single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) of the OPRM1 gene could affect the antinociceptive effect of fentanyl. Fentanyl was less effective in subjects with the G allele of the OPRM1 A118G SNP than in those with the A allele, and subjects with the G allele required more fentanyl for adequate postoperative pain control than those with the A allele. In the future, identifying SNPs might give us information to modulate the analgesic dosage of opioid individually for better pain control. Factors underlying individual differences in sensitivity to pain other than genetic factors may include environmental and psychological factors. We therefore examined the effects of preoperative anxiety on the analgesic efficacy of fentanyl in patients undergoing sagittal split mandibular osteotomy (SSMO). From among the patients enrolled in the study, 60 patients (male/female: 18/42, age: 24.6 ± 6.7 years) who gave informed consent were examined for correlations between preoperative trait/state anxiety, as measured by the state-trait anxiety inventory (STAI) on the day before surgery, and postoperative consumption of patient-controlled analgesia (PCA) fentanyl and visual analog scale (VAS) assessment by patients. Levels of trait and state anxieties measured by the STAI were correlated with neither the consumption of PCA fentanyl nor postoperative VAS assessment. These findings suggest that psychological factors are unlikely to affect postoperative pain or the use of analgesics.

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Copyright: 2010 by the American Dental Society of Anesthesiology
Figure 1
Figure 1

Changes in operative time for sagittal split mandibular osteotomy and volume of intraoperative bleeding are shown.


Figure 2
Figure 2

Frequency of need for postoperative analgesics following sagittal split mandibular osteotomy (SSMO) compared with that following oral soft tissue surgery.


Figure 3
Figure 3

Measurement of latency to pain perception before (PPLpre) and after (PPLpost) administration of fentanyl. (A patient's hand was immersed in ice-cold water so that more than half of the area of the dorsum of the hand was underwater.)


Figure 4
Figure 4

Intraoperative and postoperative procedures.


Figure 5
Figure 5

Relationships between analgesic efficacy of fentanyl (%MPE) and A118G genotypes.


Figure 6
Figure 6

Relationships between postoperative consumption of fentanyl (patient-controlled analgesia [PCA]) and A118G genotypes.


Figure 7
Figure 7

Relationship between postoperative consumption of fentanyl (patient-controlled analgesia [PCA]) and preoperative anxiety level (state-trait anxiety inventory [STAI]).


Figure 8
Figure 8

Relationship between visual analog scale (VAS) at 24 hours postoperatively and preoperative anxiety level (state-trait anxiety inventory [STAI]).


Contributor Notes

Address correspondence to Dr Ken-ichi Fukuda, 2-9-18, Misaki-cyo, Chiyoda-ku, Tokyo, Japan, 101-0063; kfukuda@tdc.ac.jp.
Received: Jan 23, 2010
Accepted: Sep 13, 2010