Category: Trauma
Keywords: Trauma, rib fracture, multimodal (PubMed Search)
Posted: 3/23/2025 by Robert Flint, MD
(Updated: 3/27/2025)
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Controlling pain from rib fractures impacts morbidity and mortality. Over the past decade there has been a focus on decreasing opiate use and approaching this painful condition in a multimodal way. “The multimodal approach utilizes a combination of delivery methods including oral, parenteral, and regional single-shot or catheter-based techniques. Oral medications include opioids, non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs), acetaminophen, skeletal muscle relaxants, alpha-2 agonists, mood stabilizers, and neuropathic pain medications. Parenteral medications encompass most of the oral options in addition to ketamine and lidocaine. Regional anesthesia includes epidural analgesia (EA), paravertebral blocks, intercostal blocks, and myofascial plane blocks.”
This study is a single center in Canada looking at medication used for patients admitted over 10 years with rib fractures along with demographics, injury severity and outcomes. The authors concluded:
“Although multimodal pain management strategies have improved over time, a large proportion of patients, even among those with flail chest, still do not receive multimodal pain management. Elderly patients, at highest risk of adverse outcomes, were less likely to receive multimodal pain management strategies and should be the target of performance improvement initiatives.”
Naveed A, Adams-McGavin RC, Ladha K, et al. A 10-year review of pain management practices for rib fractures at a lead trauma hospital: Are we adopting all multimodal pain management strategies? Trauma. 2025;27(1):18-23. doi:10.1177/14604086231198764