Publication-Based Academic Interest in Drugs and Techniques for Treatment of Postoperative Pain, 1975-2015.

J Anesth Hist

Department of Anesthesiology, Perioperative and Pain Medicine, Brigham and Women's Hospital, Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA, USA. Electronic address:

Published: October 2017

Purpose: The aim of this study was to determine how drugs and their administration techniques, introduced over the past 40 years and still popular now, influenced publication-based academic interest in the treatment of postoperative pain.

Methods: Specific scientometric indices-popularity index (PI), top journal selectivity index (TJSI), and index of change (IC)-were used. Of the 61 terms searched, only those that had a PI value ≥1.0 during the 2011-2015 period were selected. They include eight drugs-bupivacaine, fentanyl, ropivacaine, acetaminophen, tramadol, remifentanil, and dexamethasone-and five techniques-patient-controlled analgesia, epidural opioids, ultrasound-guided nerve blocks, continuous nerve blocks, and transversus abdominis plane block (presented according to their decreasing PI value in each category).

Results: Four of these drugs or techniques with the highest PI in 2011-2015 also held top positions even 20 years earlier: in 1991-1995, the PI for bupivacaine was 9.1; fentanyl, 6.6; patient-controlled analgesia, 10.4; and epidural opioids, 6.8. Since that time, their PI values slowly decreased, for the first three items by approximately 50% and much more than that (85%) with epidural opioids. Nevertheless, to this day, they continue to hold the highest degree of publication-based academic interest. The TJSI can be regarded as an index of expectations at the time of articles publication. With bupivacaine, fentanyl, patient-controlled analgesia, and epidural opioids, the TJSI exceeded the specific high threshold of 10.0 for a very long time. The TJSIs of acetaminophen, ketamine, and dexamethasone were increased with the advent of new expectations regarding the treatment of postoperative pain using these old agents.

Conclusions: Two important developments related to ultrasound-guided nerve block and continuous nerve block demonstrated only a moderate degree of academic interest. In conclusion, even today, the greatest publication-based academic interest related to postoperative pain is associated with drugs and techniques introduced 40-50 years ago.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.janh.2017.08.001DOI Listing

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