Introduction: Postoperative analgesia is one of the major concerns to significant patients posted for major surgeries. One of the gold standard techniques to control postoperative pain in significant surgeries like lower abdominal and lower limb surgeries is epidural analgesia administration with local anesthetic and opioids. The difficulty in developing a realistic risk/benefit analysis of epidural analgesia has led clinicians to frequently wonder if epidurals are beneficial for post-operative pain management and whether the procedure is safe, which has limited the adoption of the technique. The effectiveness and safety in the postoperative period after the epidural insertion with local anesthetics and steroids in persons posted for surgery are discussed in this review.
Methodology: This review article was written with a systemic literature review with the help of a data search machine-like Pub Med, Scopus, web of sciences, and Google scholar. In this article, observational studies and case reports were included.
Review Findings: The administration of substantial dosages of opioid and LA medications in the intensive care environment can achieve total dynamic pain alleviation, i.e., complete lack of discomfort while moving and coughing, after extensive upper abdominal surgery was achieved. A more practical method is to assess discomfort while movement or sneezing, to have a patient who can move, breathe deeply, and cough successfully while scoring three or less on a VAS scale recorded during moving.
Conclusions: Continuing thoracic epidural anesthesia with a lower dose Local Anesthetics–opioids combo or single-shot epidural injections seems to have the potential to provide good dynamic pain management for several persons, particularly patients undergoing significant abdominal and thoracic operations. Timely mobilization, as well as speedy recovery, require this level of pain alleviation.