Managing Acute Surgical Pain in Patients on Buprenorphine: A Case-Based Learning Module

Published on March 9, 2026

Orthop Rev (Pavia). 2026 Mar 3;18:158284. doi: 10.52965/001c.158284. eCollection 2026.

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Perioperative pain management in patients maintained on buprenorphine for opioid use disorder presents unique challenges, particularly in urgent surgical settings where proper planning and traditional opioid-based strategies may be ineffective. High-affinity partial μ-opioid receptor binding limits the analgesic efficacy of full opioid agonists often necessitating multimodal approaches.

CASE DESCRIPTION: This manuscript presents a fictional teaching case developed exclusively for educational purposes involving a 55-year-old patient maintained on buprenorphine-naloxone who requires emergency lower-extremity surgery following a traumatic injury. The case illustrates the use of regional anesthesia combined with ketamine, to achieve effective perioperative analgesia while continuing baseline buprenorphine therapy.

EDUCATIONAL VALUE: The case is accompanied by teaching points and multiple-choice practice questions focused on the mechanisms of action of local anesthetics and ketamine, as well as perioperative considerations for buprenorphine management. This teaching case is designed to reflect a highly plausible real-world clinical scenario encountered in orthopedic trauma and perioperative pain management.

CONCLUSION: This educational case highlights practical perioperative pain management strategies for patients receiving buprenorphine. This scenario does not represent a real patient encounter and is intended solely as a teaching tool for trainees and clinicians.

PMID:41797829 | PMC:PMC12962321 | DOI:10.52965/001c.158284