Alaris® System with GuardrailsŪ Suite MX Training |
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Acute Pain: Pain with a well-defined onset and predictable end with control or healing process1 Adjuvant Analgesic: A drug that has a primary indication other than pain, e.g. antidepressant or anticonvulsant, but is also analgesic for some painful conditions1 Analgesia: Absence of pain or noxious stimulation without loss of consciousness4 Analgesic: An agent that alleviates pain without causing loss of consciousness5 Analgesic Ceiling: A dose beyond which additional pain relief is not obtained4 Anesthetic: Non-opioid drug used to relieve pain during surgical procedures; local anesthetics are used to abolish pain sensation in a particular part of the body3 Anti-Siphon Valve: A control device within the administration set that prevents the occurrence of free-flow when syringe integrity is compromised Basal Rate: (term unique to PCA therapy) Same as continuous infusion rate2 Breakthrough Pain: Pain that exceeds the ongoing pain2 Chronic Pain: Pain that persists beyond healing with no predictable end (may last a lifetime)1 Clinician-Administered Bolus: Subsequent dose administered by a clinician usually after PCA and / or continuous infusion has started; on some devices, the bolus dose functions as both the loading dose and subsequent bolus dose2 Loading Dose: Clinician administered dose at the start of therapy to establish an acceptable level of comfort2 Lockout (or Delay) Interval: Parameter that allows the clinician to program a pre-determined interval of time that must elapse between delivery of PCA doses2 LOS: Level of sedation1 Maximum Limit (sometimes referred to as 1-Hour or 4-Hour limit): Total amount of analgesic the patient can receive within one or four hours by PCA bolus dose and continuous (or basal) rate2 NSAID: Nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drug (e.g. ibuprofren, naproxen, COX-2 inhibitors)2 Opioid Analgesic: Natural, semisynthetic and synthetic drugs that relieve pain by binding to multiple types of opioid receptors in the nervous system4 Opioid-Naïve: Term used to describe individuals who have NOT taken opioids regularly and have NOT developed tolerance to opioid side effects1 Opioid-Tolerant: Term used to describe individuals who have taken opioids regularly and usually have developed tolerance to most of the opioid side effects1 Parenteral Routes: Intramuscular, subcutaneous and IV routes of administration2 PCA: Patient-controlled analgesia. An interactive method of pain management that permits patients to treat their pain by self-administering doses of analgesics2 PCA Demands (or Attempts): Number of times patient presses the PCA button2 PCA Dose (or PCA Bolus): Amount of analgesic patient will receive each time a bolus is self-administered2 PCA Injections: Number of times patient successfully self-administers a PCA bolus dose2 PCA Pause Protocol: An optional and hospital configurable feature that is intended to align with the healthcare facility's current protocol for patient monitoring during PCA therapy. The PCA infusion will pause and alarm when defined monitoring values for the Alaris® SpO2 module and/or Alaris® EtCO2 module are exceeded. References
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