Prevalence of chronic pain after pulmonary resection by thoracotomy or video-assisted thoracic surgery

R J Landreneau, M J Mack, S R Hazelrigg, K Naunheim, R D Dowling, P Ritter, M J Magee, S Nunchuck, R J Keenan, P F Ferson, R J Landreneau, M J Mack, S R Hazelrigg, K Naunheim, R D Dowling, P Ritter, M J Magee, S Nunchuck, R J Keenan, P F Ferson

Abstract

The prevalence and severity of chronic pain after video-assisted thoracic surgery for pulmonary resection remains to be defined. Three hundred forty-three of 391 consecutive patients 3 to 31 months after pulmonary resection by lateral thoracotomy (n = 165) or video-assisted thoracic surgery (n = 178) responded to a questionnaire aimed at comparing the relative occurrence of chronic postoperative pain after video-assisted thoracic surgery and lateral thoracotomy approaches for pulmonary resection. Patients less than 1 year after operation (video-assisted thoracic surgery = 142; thoracotomy = 97) and more than 1 year after operation (video-assisted thoracic surgery = 36; thoracotomy = 68) were analyzed as individual cohorts. Chronic pain was assessed by questioning patients about the presence and the intensity of discomfort on the side of the operation (using a visual analog scale) and their need for analgesic medication and the presence of ongoing limitations in shoulder function. Patients who underwent video-assisted thoracic surgery (less than 1 year from operation) had less pain and subjective shoulder dysfunction although their pain medication requirements were similar to those of thoracotomy patients less than 1 year from operation. After 1 year, there was no significant difference in these "pain related" morbidity parameters between the two surgical approach groups (video-assisted thoracic surgery or thoracotomy).

Source: PubMed

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