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Acute pain management

Last updated: March 18, 2026

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Summarytoggle arrow icon

Acute pain is typically sudden in onset and lasts less than one month. It indicates actual or potential tissue damage and is associated with trauma, surgery, and/or illness. Acute pain requires prompt treatment. Analgesics should be tailored to the underlying cause, patient factors (e.g., opioid naive or opioid tolerant, contraindications for NSAIDs), and care setting. The WHO analgesic ladder can help guide the selection of the most appropriate pain management strategy. When possible, nonpharmacological analgesia and nonopioid analgesics are preferred. Opioids should only be used if the benefits outweigh the risks and additional precautions are taken to minimize associated harms (e.g., risk mitigation for opioid prescribing). Patient-controlled analgesia (PCA), self-administered by the patient and delivered intravenously by an electronically controlled infusion pump, is used for severe acute pain that is difficult to manage and expected to be of short duration. Management of acute exacerbation of chronic pain can be challenging because complete pain relief is not usually possible; the primary aim is to restore patients to baseline function. Pain management in the emergency department often involves local anesthesia, regional anesthesia, and/or analgesics for procedural sedation. Specialized pain scales and scoring systems are used to assess pain in patients who cannot communicate verbally (e.g., critically ill patients, neonates, and infants).

See "Principles of pain management" for more information on evaluation of pain, analgesics and dosages, nonpharmacological analgesia, and pain management in children.

Approach to acute paintoggle arrow icon

Administer acute pain management promptly; withholding it does not improve the accuracy of a physical examination. [3]

Choice of analgesic for acute paintoggle arrow icon

See also “Management of pain using WHO analgesic ladder.” For specific dosages, see “Oral analgesics,” “Parenteral analgesics,” and “Adjuvant analgesics.”

Choice of analgesic for acute pain [2]
Opioids likely required Nonopioid analgesics likely as effective as opioids
Injuries
Surgery
Other medical conditions

Opioids for acute paintoggle arrow icon

Risk mitigation [2]

Prescribing principles [2]

Patient-controlled analgesiatoggle arrow icon

Definition [4]

Patient-controlled analgesia is a pain management method that allows patients to self-administer predetermined doses of analgesic medication (typically opioids) via an electronically controlled infusion pump.

Indications

Components and settings [5][6][7]

  • Route of administration: IV (most common), epidural, transdermal
  • Initial loading dose (optional): improves early pain control (e.g., in the postoperative period)
  • On-demand bolus: patient-triggered, predetermined dose
  • Lockout time
    • Minimum time between boluses
    • Allows each bolus to reach peak effect, which reduces the risk of overdose
  • Continuous background infusion: basal delivery independent of patient input

General principles [5][6][7]

There is no consensus on optimal regimens; follow local protocols when available.

Standard-dose regimens

Common standard-dose regimens for IV patient-controlled analgesia in adults [5][7]
‎Opioid Bolus dosage Lockout time
Morphine
  • 1–2 mg
  • 5–10 minutes
Hydromorphone
  • 0.2–0.4 mg
  • 5–10 minutes
Fentanyl
  • 10–50 mcg
  • 5–10 minutes

Bolus dosages differ based on patient context (e.g., reason for pain control, history of opioid use).

Complications [5]

PCA may result in slightly higher opioid doses but does not increase adverse effects; respiratory complications are usually due to prescribing or administration errors. [5]

Acute-on-chronic pain managementtoggle arrow icon

General principles [3]

Management of acute-on-chronic pain requires significant empathy and skill. Follow local departmental policies if available.

Acute-on-chronic pain management in hospital-based settings [2][3]

Involve the patient's regular health provider in treatment decisions whenever possible and be aware of the potential for drug diversion of prescriptions made by other health providers.

Pain management in the emergency departmenttoggle arrow icon

Severe pain

Extremity injuries

Minimize undertreatment [3]

  • ED patients' pain can be undertreated for a variety of reasons (e.g., communication barriers, atypical presentations, and implicit biases).
  • Patients at risk of undertreatment include children, individuals of different cultural and/or linguistic backgrounds, and individuals with neurocognitive disorders.

Ambulatory opioid prescriptions

  • Limit duration to < 3–5 days.
  • Arrange rapid follow-up with a regular health provider for dosage adjustments.
  • See also "Opioids for acute pain."

Special patient groupstoggle arrow icon

Pain in critically ill patients

Assessment of pain in the ICU

  • Specialized pain scales: often used in ICU when patients are unable to communicate [9]
  • Behavioral pain scale
  • Critical care pain observation tool (CCPOT)
    • Used to identify pain in critically ill patients.
    • Four items are evaluated and awarded points: facial expressions, body movements, ventilator compliance in intubated patients or vocalization in nonintubated patients, and muscle tension
    • ≥ 3 points indicates significant pain
  • Conscious patients: Obtain subjective grading of pain severity using a pain intensity scale.
Pain intensity scales for critically ill patients
Behavioral pain scale score CCPOT score
Facial expression
  • 1 point for relaxed
  • 2 points for partially tightened
  • 3 points for fully tightened
  • 0 points for relaxed
  • 1 point for tense
  • 2 points for grimacing
Movement
  • Upper limbs
    • 1 point for no movement
    • 2 points for partially bent
    • 3 points for fully bent with finger flexion
    • 4 points for permanently retracted
  • Body
    • 0 points for no movement or normal
    • 1 point for protection
    • 2 points for restless or agitated
Muscle tension
  • N/A
  • 0 points for relaxed
  • 1 point for rigid or tense
  • 2 points for very rigid or tense
Mechanical ventilation compliance
  • 1 point for tolerating movement
  • 2 points for coughing, but tolerating most of the time
  • 3 points for fighting ventilator
  • 4 points for unable to control ventilation
  • Intubated patients
    • 0 points for tolerating normally
    • 1 point tolerating but coughing
    • 2 points for fighting the ventilator
Vocalization for extubated patients
  • N/A
  • 0 points normal tone or no sound
  • 1 point for moaning or sighing
  • 2 points for crying or sobbing

Pain management [10]

Be aware of the adverse effects of opioids (e.g., delirium, CNS depression, tolerance) or NSAID therapy.

Acute pain in children

See "Pain management in children."

Referencestoggle arrow icon

  1. Dowell et al. CDC Clinical Practice Guideline for Prescribing Opioids for Pain - United States, 2022. MMWR. Recommendations and Reports. 2022; 71 (3): p.1-95.doi: 10.15585/mmwr.rr7103a1 . | Open in Read by QxMD
  2. Walls R, Hockberger R, Gausche-Hill M, Erickson TB, Wilcox SR. Rosen's Emergency Medicine 10th edition- Concepts and Clinical Practice E-Book. Elsevier Health Sciences ; 2022
  3. Schwenk ES, Viscusi ER, Buvanendran A, et al. Consensus Guidelines on the Use of Intravenous Ketamine Infusions for Acute Pain Management From the American Society of Regional Anesthesia and Pain Medicine, the American Academy of Pain Medicine, and the American Society of Anesthesiologists. Reg Anesth Pain Med. 2018: p.1.doi: 10.1097/aap.0000000000000806 . | Open in Read by QxMD
  4. Marra A, Ely EW, Pandharipande PP, Patel MB. The ABCDEF Bundle in Critical Care. Crit Care Clin. 2017; 33 (2): p.225-243.doi: 10.1016/j.ccc.2016.12.005 . | Open in Read by QxMD
  5. Barr J. et al. Clinical Practice Guidelines for the Management of Pain, Agitation, and Delirium in Adult Patients in the Intensive Care Unit. Critical Care Medicine. 2013.
  6. $Contributor Disclosures - Acute pain management. All of the relevant financial relationships listed for the following individuals have been mitigated: Sophie Holmes (medical editor, was employed by Costello Medical Consulting through Dec 2023). None of the other individuals in control of the content for this article reported relevant financial relationships with ineligible companies. For details, please review our full conflict of interest (COI) policy.
  7. Macintyre PE. Safety and efficacy of patient-controlled analgesia. Br J Anaesth. 2001; 87 (1): p.36-46.doi: 10.1093/bja/87.1.36 . | Open in Read by QxMD
  8. Motamed C. Clinical Update on Patient-Controlled Analgesia for Acute Postoperative Pain. Pharmacy. 2022; 10 (1): p.22.doi: 10.3390/pharmacy10010022 . | Open in Read by QxMD
  9. Chou R, Gordon D, de Leon-Casasola O, Rosenberg J, Bickler S, Brennan T, Carter T, Cassidy C, Chittenden E, Degenhardt E, Griffith S, Manworren R, McCarberg B, Montgomery R, Murphy J, Perkal M, Suresh S, Sluka K, Strassels S, Thirlby R, Viscusi E, Walco G. Management of Postoperative Pain: A Clinical Practice Guideline From the American Pain Society, the American Society of Regional Anesthesia and Pain Medicine, and the American Society of Anesthesiologists' Committee on Regional Anesthesia, Executive Committee, and Administrative Council. J Pain. 2016; 17 (2): p.131-157.doi: 10.1016/j.jpain.2015.12.008 . | Open in Read by QxMD
  10. Grass J. Patient-Controlled Analgesia. Anesth Analg.. 2005; 101 (5S): p.S44-S61.doi: 10.1213/01.ane.0000177102.11682.20 . | Open in Read by QxMD
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