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Opioids use doubles the risk of fracture complications: Research

A study conducted by researchers at Louisiana State University proved that opioid use may double the risk of nonunion and smokers are at a higher risk.

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WASHINGTON: Pain relieving Opioids may be a significant and substantial risk factor for fracture nonunion finds researchers at Louisiana State University.

Nonunion is a serious complication of a fracture and may occur when the fracture moves too much, or has a poor blood supply or gets infected. Patients who smoke have a higher incidence of nonunion.

A study conducted by researchers at Louisiana State University suggests that opioid-naive patients receive an opioid prescription for post-operative pain control at hospital discharge after major surgery. Yet they report there is no evidence that opioids are more effective than non-opioids for acute extremity pain.

"Chronic opioid use roughly doubled the risk of nonunion among all patients, and this effect was fairly consistent across all ages and both genders," noted Dr Zura, a researcher.

The researchers reported that Schedule II opioids, as a group, create a greater nonunion risk than non-opioid analgesics. They also suggested that chronic use of certain medications may be a significant and substantial risk factor for fracture nonunion.

The study concluded that using Opioids as a pain reliever increases the risk of  Nonunion and pressed the use of multimodal, non-opioid analgesic techniques at fracture.

The findings are published in the 'Journal of Injury'.

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