A Synthetic Cannabinoid Did NOT Reduce Opioid Use After Knee Replacement Surgery
| Study Type |
Prospective randomized triple-blind placebo-controlled trial Want to apply this research to your care? CED Clinic translates emerging research into individualized clinical care. Dr. Caplan has treated 30,000+ patients. Book a consultation → |
| Population | Adults undergoing total knee arthroplasty |
| Primary Outcome | Postoperative opioid consumption |
| Clinical Relevance | High relevance for pain management claims and expectations around cannabis opioid-sparing effects |
A Synthetic Cannabinoid Did Not Reduce Opioid Use After Knee Replacement Surgery
What This Study Teaches Us
Why This Matters
| Study Question | Can a synthetic cannabinoid reduce opioid use after knee replacement surgery? |
| Design | Triple-blind randomized placebo-controlled trial |
| Primary Finding | No significant reduction in opioid use |
| Practical Interpretation | Cannabinoid opioid-sparing effects may be more context-dependent than many public narratives suggest |
