Pain therapy in acute pediatric diseases and vaccination

2000 
PHENOMENON PAIN: While pain is one of the main reasons for an unscheduled visit to the paediatrician, pain due to painful procedures is of major importance in scheduled visits. Actual pain therapy is illustrated in the treatment of burns. Incomplete analgesia may have an unfavourable impact on morbidity and mortality. The pain score does not correlate with the extent of the burned area, and is regularly underestimated. General anaesthesia or analgo-sedation are warranted during the care of the burned patient. INSUFFICIENT ANALGESIA: Consequence of insufficient analgesia during primary care is an increased need of analgesics, and an increased pain treatment failure rate during subsequent procedures. Pain is interfering with anxiety, sleep disturbances and post-traumatic psychologic alterations. All those symptoms must be treated adequately. ACUTE ILLNESS AND INJECTIONS: This article covers pain from otitis media, pharyngitis, Guillain-Barre syndrome, purpura fulminans, Toxic Epidermal Nekrolysis, as well as the usage of local anaesthesia during injections, not to forget the application of non-pharmacologic methods for pain therapy and prophylaxis.
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