J. Jakobsson et al., INTRAMUSCULAR NSAIDS REDUCE POSTOPERATIVE PAIN AFTER MINOR OUTPATIENTANESTHESIA, European journal of anaesthesiology, 13(1), 1996, pp. 67-71
Two hundred healthy patients scheduled for elective minor gynaecologic
al surgery under general anaesthesia were randomly allocated to one of
four groups who received either diclofenac 75 mg intramuscularly (i.m
.), ketorolac 30 mg i.m., diclofenac 50 mg orally, or 2 mL NaCl i.m. T
he drugs were administered 10-20 min prior to a standard anaesthetic.
All surgery was uneventful. The patients were discharged after a mean
of 110+/-30 min with no differences between the groups. Complaints abo
ut pain and need for post-operative analgesics were significantly less
frequent in the two groups of patients receiving an intramuscular non
-steroidal anti-inflammmatory drug (NSAID), as compared to placebo. Th
e patients who received 50 mg diclofenac orally, administered shortly
before the procedure, had the same pain course as the placebo patients
.