ABSTRACT
Purpose: Non-steroidal
anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs) like ibuprofen are common medications with
multiple useful effects including pain relief and reduction of inflammation. Surgeons
commonly hold all NSAIDs peri-operatively because of bleeding concerns. However,
not all NSAIDs irreversibly block platelet function. We hypothesized that the
use of ibuprofen would have no effect on postoperative bleeding in plastic
surgery patients.
Methods: A literature review was performed using
Medline (PubMed), EMBASE, and the Cochrane Collaboration Library for primary
research articles on ibuprofen and bleeding. Inclusion criteria were primary
journal articles examining treatment of acute postoperative based on any
modality. Data related to pain assessment, postoperative recovery, and complications
were extracted. Bias assessment and meta-analysis were performed.
Results: A total of 881 publications were reviewed. Four primary randomized controlled trials were selected for full analysis. Articles were of high quality by bias assessment. No significant difference was noted regarding bleeding events (p = 0.32) and pain control was noted to be equivalent.
Conclusion: Ibuprofen
is a useful medication in the setting of surgery with multiple beneficial
effects. This meta-analysis represents a small set of high quality studies that
suggests ibuprofen provides equivalent pain control to narcotics. Importantly,
ibuprofen was not associated with an increased risk of bleeding. Further large
studies will be necessary to elucidate this issue further, but ibuprofen is a
safe postoperative analgesic in patients undergoing common plastic surgery soft
tissue procedures.