Arthroscopy of the knee joint produces an initial afferent barrage of pain
signals that have the capacity to initiate prolonged changes in the nervous
system leading to the amplification and prolongation of postoperative pain
.
Preemptive analgesia involves the administration of analgesics prior to pai
nful stimuli to prevent the amplification of postoperative pain.
It is currently recommended that multimodal analgesic regimens be utilized
in the management of postoperative pain.
Intra-articular bupivacaine and morphine are effective analgesics for arthr
oscopic knee surgery.
Intra-articular ketorolac, corticosteroids, and clonidine may also have a r
ole in reducing pain following arthroscopic knee surgery.
Nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs play an important role in the manageme
nt of postoperative orthopaedic pain, and the newer cyclooxygenase-2-specif
ic nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs may have additional advantages with
respect to safety.
Preemptive and multimodal analgesic techniques should be utilized in the ma
nagement of patients undergoing anterior cruciate reconstruction.