Risk factors for long-term pain after hernia surgery

Ulf Fränneby, Gabriel Sandblom, Pär Nordin, Olof Nyrén, Ulf Gunnarsson, Ulf Fränneby, Gabriel Sandblom, Pär Nordin, Olof Nyrén, Ulf Gunnarsson

Abstract

Objective: To estimate the prevalence of residual pain 2 to 3 years after hernia surgery, to identify factors associated with its occurrence, and to assess the consequences for the patient.

Summary background data: Iatrogenic chronic pain is a neglected problem that may totally annul the benefits from hernia repair.

Methods: From the population-based Swedish Hernia Register 3000 patients aged 15 to 85 years were sampled from the 9280 patients registered as having undergone a primary groin hernia operation in the year 2000. Of these, the 2853 patients still alive in 2003 were requested to fill in a postal questionnaire.

Results: After 2 reminders, 2456 patients (86%), 2299 men and 157 women responded. In response to a question about "worst perceived pain last week," 758 patients (31%) reported pain to some extent. In 144 cases (6%), the pain interfered with daily activities. Age below median, a high level of pain before the operation, and occurrence of any postoperative complication were found to significantly and independently predict long-term pain in multivariate logistic analysis when "worst pain last week" was used as outcome variable. The same variables, along with a repair technique using anterior approach, were found to predict long-term pain with "pain right now" as outcome variable.

Conclusion: Pain that is at least partly disabling appears to occur more often than recurrences. The prevalence of long-term pain can be reduced by preventing postoperative complications. The impact of repair technique on the risk of long-term pain shown in our study should be further assessed in randomized controlled trials.

Figures

https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/instance/1602172/bin/7FF1.jpg
FIGURE 1. Prevalence of residual pain by age. Vertical bars indicate 95% confidence intervals. Numbers in brackets on the x-axis indicate number of responders to the 2 respective questions.
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/instance/1602172/bin/7FF2.jpg
FIGURE 2. Prevalence of residual pain by technique of repair. Vertical bars indicate 95% confidence intervals. Numbers in brackets on the x-axis indicate number of responders to the 2 respective questions.

Source: PubMed

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