Anesthesia and analgesia
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Anesthesia and analgesia · Mar 2019
Evaluation of the Determinants of Satisfaction With Postoperative Pain Control After Thoracoscopic Surgery: A Single-Center, Survey-Based Study.
The need to measure, compare, and improve the quality of pain management is important to patients, payers, and health care providers. Pain after thoracic surgery can be severe, and thoracoscopic approaches have not had the favorable impact on pain as anticipated. The aim of this study was to evaluate the determinants of patient satisfaction with acute pain management and the effectiveness of pain control after video-assisted thoracoscopic surgery using a modified version of the Revised American Pain Society Patient Outcome Questionnaire. ⋯ Our findings highlight several factors associated with patient satisfaction with acute postoperative pain management. Interventions focused on achieving acceptable pain levels for the majority of the time, ensuring that patients are able to get sleep, providing patients with helpful information about their pain treatment, and, most importantly, allowing patients to participate in decisions about their pain management may improve patient satisfaction with postoperative pain management.
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Anesthesia and analgesia · Mar 2019
Does the Incidence of Postoperative Complications After Inguinal Hernia Repair Justify Hospital Admission in Prematurely and Term Born Infants?
Postoperatively, young infants are admitted overnight in view of the risk for respiratory complications such as desaturation and apnea. This risk seems much lower than previously reported. Until what age this risk persists, and which infants might actually qualify for day-care treatment, is unknown. ⋯ Incidence of postoperative respiratory complications is high in preterm infants <45 weeks PCA requiring postoperative overnight saturation and heart rate monitoring. Incidence of postoperative complications in preterm born infants 45-60 weeks PCA varies. Gestational age and possibly presence of respiratory history can be used to estimate the need for overnight admission in these infants. Postoperative respiratory complications after inguinal hernia repair in ASA physical status I and II term born infants >1 month of age are uncommon, which justifies day-care admission for this type of surgical procedure.
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Pro- and anti-inflammatory cytokines (adipokines) associated with adipose tissue can modulate inflammatory processes and lead to systemic inflammatory conditions such as metabolic syndrome. In the present pilot study, we investigated 3 major adipokines (leptin, adiponectin, and resistin) and 2 nonspecific proinflammatory cytokines (tumor necrosis factor α and interleukin-6) with regard to their association with postoperative pain intensity. ⋯ A genetic variant of resistin and serum resistin levels were associated with postoperative pain intensity, while other adipokines and cytokines exhibit no such association. Resistin can alter the inflammatory responses in postoperative wounds, although it could be a determinant factor that is independent of inflammatory processes. Resistin may be a novel marker for postoperative pain intensity.