Improvement of 'dynamic analgesia' does not decrease atelectasis after thoracotomy
N Boisseau, O Rabary, B Padovani, P Staccini, J Mouroux, D Grimaud, M Raucoules-Aimé, N Boisseau, O Rabary, B Padovani, P Staccini, J Mouroux, D Grimaud, M Raucoules-Aimé
Abstract
There is still controversy concerning the beneficial aspects of 'dynamic analgesia' (i.e. pain while coughing or moving) on the reduction of postoperative atelectasis. In this study, we tested the hypothesis that thoracic epidural analgesia (TEA) prevents these abnormalities as opposed to multimodal analgesia with i.v. patient controlled analgesia (i.v. PCA) after thoracotomy. Fifty-four patients undergoing thoracotomy (lung cancer) were randomly assigned to one of the two groups. Clinical respiratory characteristics, arterial blood gas, and pulmonary function tests (forced vital capacity and forced expiratory volume in 1 s) were obtained before surgery and on the next 3 postoperative days. Atelectasis was compared between the two groups by performing computed tomography (CT) scan of the chest at day 3. Postoperative respiratory function and arterial blood gas values were reduced compared with preoperative values (mean (SD) FEV1 day 0: 1.1 (0.3) litre; 1.3 (0.4) litre) but there was no significant difference between groups at any time. PCA and TEA provided a good level of analgesia at rest (VAS day 0: 21 (15/100); 8 (9/100)), but TEA was more effective for analgesia during mobilization (VAS day 0: 52 (3/100); 25 (17/100)). CT scans revealed comparable amounts of atelectasis (expressed as a percentage of total lung volume) in the TEA (7.1 (2.8)%) and in the i.v. PCA group (6.71 (3.2)%). There was no statistical difference in the number of patients presenting with at least one atelectasis of various types (lamellar, plate, segmental, lobar).
Source: PubMed
Prossimi studi clinici
-
University of TennesseeWoodcock Institute for the Advancement of Neurocognitive Research and Applied...Non ancora reclutamentoCapacità motorie | Sano | Funzione esecutiva
-
University of Texas Southwestern Medical CenterMerck Sharp & Dohme LLCNon ancora reclutamentoCarcinoma anale a cellule squamose
-
Universita di VeronaAzienda Ospedaliera Universitaria Integrata VeronaNon ancora reclutamentoArtrite reumatoide | Malattia degenerativa delle articolazioni del ginocchioItalia
-
University of Wisconsin, MadisonAlkermes, Inc.Non ancora reclutamento
-
Virginia Commonwealth UniversityNon ancora reclutamentoEdema cerebrale | Necrosi da radiazioniStati Uniti
-
Weill Medical College of Cornell UniversityNational Institute of Mental Health (NIMH); Icahn School of Medicine at Mount...Non ancora reclutamentoKetamina | fMRI | Depressione - Disturbo depressivo maggiore | rTMS | Depressione resistente al trattamento (TRD)Stati Uniti
-
Weill Medical College of Cornell UniversityBD2 LLCNon ancora reclutamentofMRI | Disturbo bipolare (BD) | rTMS | Bipolare 1 DepressioneStati Uniti
-
Xentria, Inc.Non ancora reclutamento
-
Yale UniversityNational Institute of Mental Health (NIMH)Non ancora reclutamento
-
Cambridge University Hospitals NHS Foundation TrustUniversity of CambridgeReclutamentoFeocromocitoma | Feocromocitoma/Paraganglioma | Feocromocitoma, metastatico | Feocromocitoma Maligno | Pheocromocitoma e Paraganglioma (PPGL)Regno Unito
-
Carl Zeiss Meditec-Dublin CoCeReclutamentoMembrana epiretinica | Malattia della retina | Degenerazione maculare legata all'età secca | Anomalia vitreoretinica | Macular Abnormalities | Intraretinal Hyporeflective Space | Subretinal Hyporeflective Space | IS/OS (Ellipsoid Zone) Disruption | Retinal Pigment Epithelium (RPE) Elevation | Retinal Pigment...Stati Uniti
-
Celest Therapeutics (Shanghai) Co., Ltd.The First Affiliated Hospital of Anhui Medical UniversityReclutamento