Articles: post-operative.
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Randomized Controlled Trial
Impact of analgesic techniques on early quality of recovery after prostatectomy: a 3-arm, randomised trial.
Prostatectomy is associated with relevant acute postoperative pain. Optimal analgesic techniques to minimize pain and enhance recovery are still under investigation. We aimed to compare the effect of three different analgesic techniques on quality of recovery. ⋯ Optimal analgesic techniques to enhance recovery after prostatectomy are still under investigation. In this 3-arm randomized controlled trial, addition of spinal anaesthesia or transversus abdominis plane block to general anaesthesia did not improve quality of recovery after radical prostatectomy compared to less invasive intravenous lidocaine infusion (standard of care/control group). Quality of recovery at the time of discharge was considered as good in all three groups.
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Minerva anestesiologica · Oct 2022
Randomized Controlled TrialDuloxetine role in reducing opioid consumption after thoracotomy: a prospective, randomized, double -blinded, placebo - controlled pilot trial.
Exploration of the thoracic cavity through a thoracotomy incision for thoracic malignancies is accompanied by severe, excruciating acute postoperative pain. The objective of this study is to evaluate the efficacy of perioperative duloxetine when given as part of a multimodal analgesia in reducing the dose of opioids needed to treat acute postoperative pain after thoracotomy. ⋯ Oral duloxetine used perioperatively during thoracic surgery may play an important role as multimodal analgesia for acute postoperative pain without any added side effects.
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Critical care medicine · Oct 2022
Meta AnalysisProphylactic Postoperative Noninvasive Ventilation in Adults Undergoing Upper Abdominal Surgery: A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis.
Postoperative pulmonary complications (PPCs) are a leading cause of morbidity and mortality following upper abdominal surgery. Applying either noninvasive ventilation (NIV) or continuous positive airway pressure (CPAP) in the early postoperative period is suggested to prevent PPC. We aimed to assess whether postoperative NIV or CPAP or both prevent PPCs compared with standard care in adults undergoing upper abdominal surgery, including in those identified at higher PPC risk. Additionally, the different interventions used were evaluated to assess whether there is a superior approach. ⋯ These findings suggest routine provision of either prophylactic NIV or CPAP following upper abdominal surgery may not be effective to reduce PPCs' including in those identified at higher risk.
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Curr Opin Anaesthesiol · Oct 2022
ReviewUse of regional analgesia to prevent the conversion from acute to chronic pain.
Chronic post-surgical pain (CPSP) prevalence has not changed over the past decades what questions the efficacy of preventive strategies. Regional analgesia is used to control acute pain, but preventive effect on CPSP remains debated. Failures and future application of regional analgesia to prevent transition from acute to chronic pain will be discussed. ⋯ Regional analgesia failure to prevent CPSP development should prompt us to reconsider its perioperative utilization. Patients' stratification, for example high-pain responders, might help to target those who will most benefit of regional analgesia. The impact of regional analgesia on secondary pain-related outcomes such as intensity and neuropathic character despite no difference on CPSP incidence requires more studies. Finally, the preventive effect of regional analgesia targeted interventions on CPSP in patients suffering from severe subacute pain deserves to be assessed.
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Anesthesia and analgesia · Oct 2022
Open Reimplementation of the BIS Algorithms for Depth of Anesthesia.
BIS (a brand of processed electroencephalogram [EEG] depth-of-anesthesia monitor) scores have become interwoven into clinical anesthesia care and research. Yet, the algorithms used by such monitors remain proprietary. We do not actually know what we are measuring. If we knew, we could better understand the clinical prognostic significance of deviations in the score and make greater research advances in closed-loop control or avoiding postoperative cognitive dysfunction or juvenile neurological injury. In previous work, an A-2000 BIS monitor was forensically disassembled and its algorithms (the BIS Engine) retrieved as machine code. Development of an emulator allowed BIS scores to be calculated from arbitrary EEG data for the first time. We now address the fundamental questions of how these algorithms function and what they represent physiologically. ⋯ The openibis algorithm finally provides definitive answers about the BIS: the reliance of the most important signal components on the low-gamma waveband and how these components are weighted against each other. Reverse engineering allows these conclusions to be reached with a clarity and precision that cannot be obtained by other means. These results contradict previous review articles that were believed to be authoritative: the BIS score does not appear to depend on a bispectral index at all. These results put clinical anesthesia research using depth-of-anesthesia scores on a firm footing by elucidating their physiological basis and enabling comparison to other animal models for mechanistic research.