Nidaul Khaira
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LITERATUR REVIEW PENGARUH PEMBERIAN MULTI MODAL ANALGESIA INTRA ANESTESI TERHADAP STABILITAS TEKNANAN DARAH PASIEN SELAMA OPERASI Fahria Nur Maulida; Miftahul Khoeriyah; Nidaul Khaira
Jurnal Riset Multidisiplin Edukasi Vol. 2 No. 12 (2025): Jurnal Riset Multidisiplin Edukasi (Edisi Desember 2025)
Publisher : PT. Hasba Edukasi Mandiri

Show Abstract | Download Original | Original Source | Check in Google Scholar | DOI: 10.71282/jurmie.v2i12.1376

Abstract

Blood pressure stability during surgery is crucial to prevent anesthetic complications. Blood pressure fluctuations often occur due to pain response and surgical stress. One effective way to control this condition is through intra-anesthetic multimodal analgesia, which involves the use of a combination of analgesic drugs with different mechanisms of action. Research by (Wang et al. 2025),  (Negm et al. 2025) (Besnier et al. 2024) shows that a combination of drugs such as dexmedetomidine, lidocaine, and magnesium sulfate can maintain hemodynamic stability and reduce the need for inhalation anesthesia. Therefore, it is important to review the scientific evidence regarding the effect of multimodal intra-anesthetic analgesia on blood pressure stability in patients during surgery. Objective: This literature review aims to determine and analyze the effect of multimodal intra-anesthetic analgesia on blood pressure stability in patients during surgery, based on the results of relevant national and international studies in the last five years (2023–2025). Research Method: This study design uses a literature review method, examining and analyzing 10 scientific journals focusing on the topic of multimodal intra-anesthetic analgesia. The journals used consist of six national journals and four international journals from reliable sources such as the Indonesian Journal of Anesthesiology Nursing and BMC Anesthesiology. The analysis was conducted by reviewing the research design, interventions used, blood pressure parameters, and intraoperative hemodynamic stability results. Research Results: The results of the review show that multimodal intra-anesthetic analgesia is effective in maintaining blood pressure stability during surgery. The combination of drugs such as dexmedetomidine, lidocaine, paracetamol, low-dose ketamine, and magnesium sulfate was able to reduce blood pressure fluctuations and the need for inhalation anesthesia compared to the use of opioids alone. All journals reviewed showed consistent results supporting the positive effects of this approach on patient hemodynamic stability.
PENGARUH PEMBERIAN MULTI MODAL ANALGESIA INTRA ANESTESI TERHADAP STABILITAS TEKNANAN DARAH PASIEN SELAMA OPERASI Fahria Nur Maulida; Miftahul Khoeriyah; Nidaul Khaira; Ratih Kusuma Dewi
Jurnal Riset Multidisiplin Edukasi Vol. 2 No. 12 (2025): Jurnal Riset Multidisiplin Edukasi (Edisi Desember 2025)
Publisher : PT. Hasba Edukasi Mandiri

Show Abstract | Download Original | Original Source | Check in Google Scholar | DOI: 10.71282/jurmie.v2i12.1486

Abstract

Background: Blood pressure stability during surgery is essential to prevent anesthetic complications caused by pain and surgical stress. Multimodal intra-anesthetic analgesia, which combines analgesic drugs with different mechanisms of action, has been shown to help maintain hemodynamic stability. Several studies report that combinations of dexmedetomidine, lidocaine, ketamine, paracetamol, and magnesium sulfate can reduce blood pressure fluctuations and inhalation anesthetic requirements. Objective: This literature review aims to analyze the effect of multimodal intra-anesthetic analgesia on blood pressure stability in surgical patients based on studies published between 2023 and 2025. Methods: A literature review was conducted using 10 scientific journals (six national and four international) from credible sources. The analysis focused on study design, analgesic interventions, blood pressure parameters, and intraoperative hemodynamic outcomes. Results: The review demonstrates that multimodal intra-anesthetic analgesia effectively maintains intraoperative blood pressure stability. Compared with opioid-based analgesia alone, multimodal approaches consistently reduced blood pressure fluctuations and anesthetic requirements.