Articles: postoperative.
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In 60 women undergoing vaginal hysterectomy, a total of 420 pain evaluations of postoperative pain intensity were performed by an observer and the patients. Pain intensity was rated by the observer on a visual analogue scale. The patients themselves evaluated their pain on a visual analogue scale and on a 101-point numerical rating scale. ⋯ The correlation between patients' self-assessments and observers' ratings was poor (r (2)=0.28;y=0.66x+31.3). There was also no clear correlation between pain intensity and heart rate or arterial blood pressure. A reliable assessment of pain intensity can only be performed by patients' self-assessment and not by observers' ratings.
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Numerous postoperative analgesic therapies are continuing to develop as interest increases in the control of acute pain, particularly within the specialty of anaesthesia. Further progress will be made in the near future in relation to preemptive analgesia and reduction of postoperative pain by controlling spinal cord plasticity.(41,42) The concept of multimodal or balanced analgesia(43) in which the combined use of specific agents blocking specific segments of the pain pathway is another area which may provide improvements in postoperative analgesia.
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Perioperative myocardial ischaemia is common in patients who have or are at risk of coronary artery disease, occurring frequently in the pre-, intra- and postoperative periods. The majority of perioperative ischaemic episodes are silent, being unaccompanied by any symptoms of angina. ⋯ Maintenance of haemodynamic stability is important to reduce the incidence of myocardial ischemia, but ischaemia may occur in the absence of adverse haemodynamic changes. Although our efforts have largely been devoted to the prevention and treatment of intraoperative ischaemia, it is hoped that similar efforts outside the operating room in the postoperative period will further improve patient care and outcome.
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The outcome of disk surgery in 40 consecutive patients was predicted by pre-treatment assessments of sociodemographic and psychological variables and findings in a standardised orthopaedic and neurological examination. The pre-surgery variables that proved to be associated with outcome criteria six months post surgery by means of a multiple stepwise regression procedure were selected for discriminant analyses, using three outcome criteria: functional status, patient evaluation of the outcome, and vocational rehabilitation. ⋯ No prediction was possible for postoperative pain behaviour and postoperative orthopaedic and neurological status. Significant predictors were time off work before surgery, active search for information about disease and surgery, presence of conditions that reinforce pain behaviour, and cognitive variables indicating helplessness.
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Thirty patients who had undergone elective anterolateral thoracotomy were studied in the surgical intensive care unit to compare the analgesic effectiveness of i.v. self-administered buprenorphine (group A) with that of epidural administration (group B) and of s.c. administration by a nurse of 0.3 mg buprenorphine every 3-4 h (group C, controls). Every 2 h the patients were asked to record their subjektive pain level as a percentage on an analogue scale: zero was to be used for no pain and 100% for the most severe pain they could imagine. the mean of all analogue scores for pain in the first 36 h was 19.4+/-3.1 for group A; 18.4+/-2.3 for group B and 42.0+/-7.4 for group C (P<0.025). When the mean scores were referred to time, it seemed that groups A and B suffered a little more pain immediately after the operation; however, after 4 h the mean scores for these groups were far lower than that for the control group. ⋯ Nurses should be instructed to provide analgesic medication on demand. Epidural administration of buprenorphine is superior to self-administration in terms of the amount of drugs used and the dosing intervals. In the quality of analgesia epidural administration and self-administration are equal and superior to the control procedure.