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Postoperative Pediatric Pain Practice Post the Codeine Era: Peri-Operative...

Video Published 2019-01-11 Updated 2026-06-02

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Topic Overview

Comprehensive review of pediatric postoperative pain management following codeine restrictions, emphasizing developmental differences in drug metabolism and CNS maturity. Covers historical undertreatment, age-specific pharmacokinetics (especially blood-brain barrier immaturity in infants under 12 months), and the critical distinction between lipophilic (fentanyl) versus hydrophilic (morphine) opioid dosing in neonates and young children.

Key Takeaways

  • Children's pain was historically undertreated; only 3% received post-op analgesia in 1968, with revolution starting in 1990s.
  • Blood-brain barrier immaturity in infants <9 months alters opioid pharmacokinetics; morphine dosing differs from adults.
  • Fentanyl crosses immature blood-brain barrier equally in all ages due to high lipophilicity, unlike hydrophilic morphine.
  • Pediatric pain management requires assessing child AND family as two patients; previous experiences significantly impact outcomes.
  • Hepatic immaturity and reduced protein binding in neonates alter drug metabolism; standard adult dosing ratios don't apply.

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