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Query: UMLS:C0015672 (
fatigue
)
51,768
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Twenty patients undergoing colonic resection were randomized to either conventional postoperative pain treatment with morphine chloride and acetaminophen (group 1, n = 9) or methylprednisolone sodium succinate 90 minutes before surgery plus intraoperative neural blockade, with a postoperative analgesic regimen with combined bupivacaine hydrochloride-morphine and indomethacin sodium for systemic effect (group 2, n = 11). Assessments of pain, pulmonary function, convalescence, and various injury factors were done several times until 8 days after surgery.
Postoperative pain
and hyperthermic response were eliminated in group 2. Conventional reduction in pulmonary function measures was improved in group 2, and
fatigue
and mobility were less pronounced. Prostaglandin E2, interleukin 6, and C-reactive protein levels increased in both groups, but significantly less in group 2. These results suggest that a combined neural and humoral blockade may more effectively inhibit the global stress response to elective surgery than previously observed with neural blockade with or without indomethacin.
...
PMID:Effect of combined prednisolone, epidural analgesia, and indomethacin on the systemic response after colonic surgery. 843 Nov 27
Sixteen otherwise healthy women undergoing cholecystectomy were randomized to receive postoperative analgesia either by continuous infusion of papaveretum (n = 8), or by continuous interpleural infusion of bupivacaine (n = 8).
Postoperative pain
was assessed by linear analogue and ventilatory capacity. Changes in body protein were measured by in vivo neutron activation analysis. Clinical course was also noted. Pain scores were significantly lower in the interpleural group over the first 48 h (P less than 0.02). Ventilatory capacity was also significantly better for the first 24 h (P less than 0.025). There was no evidence of shortened postoperative ileus; hospital stay and postoperative
fatigue
were similar for the two groups. Weight and protein losses over a 2 week period were similar in the two groups. It is concluded that the apparent advantages in patient comfort and mobility offered by interpleural infusion are most marked in the first 48 h postoperatively, with an advantage in ventilatory capacity over the first 24 h.
...
PMID:Interpleural catheter for analgesia after cholecystectomy: the surgical perspective. 220 33
Postoperative pain
, activity level, medication use, and psychological variables after laparoscopic tubal ligation with Falope rings in 1-day surgery in 50 women was investigated. The women completed the McGill Pain Questionnaire, the Modified Functional Assessment Instrument, the Brief Symptom Inventory, the Krantz Health Opinion Survey, and the state scale of the State-Trait Anxiety Inventory. The McGill Pain Questionnaire generated the pain rating index total score (PRIT) and the present pain intensity (PPI). The women repeated pain and activity scales after surgery, before discharge, and daily before bed for 7 days. Pain scores declined over the week. Mean PRIT scores were lower than expected because some women objected to a single word descriptor of pain. 38 women took codeine-containing medication. 42 women took 4-7 days to return to normal activity because of pain and
fatigue
. Psychological test scores did not correlate with pain or activity scores. The sum of PRIT and PPI scores was a good predictor of return to activity.
...
PMID:Pain after day-care tubal ligation. 237 53
A hundred patients scheduled for elective abdominal surgery were randomized to either general anaesthesia (low-dose fentanyl) and systemic morphine for postoperative pain or combined general anaesthesia and epidural analgesia with etidocaine 1.5% intraoperatively (T4-S5) and bupivacaine 0.5% 5 ml/4 h for 24 h and morphine 4 mg/12 h for 72 h.
Postoperative pain
was better controlled by the epidural regimen (P less than 0.0001). We found no significant reduction in postoperative mortality (6% to 2%), pneumonia (28% to 20%), cardiac dysrhythmia (10% to 5%) and wound complications (14% to 11%) by the epidural analgesic regimen. The incidence of deep venous thrombosis (125I-fibrinogen scan) was 32% after general anaesthesia and low-dose heparin and 34% after epidural analgesia with no prophylactic antithrombotic treatment (P greater than 0.9). Postoperative weight loss and decrease in serum-albumin and serum-transferrin, as well as the reduction in haemoglobin and the need for postoperative transfusions, were similar in the two groups. Convalescence, as assessed by postoperative
fatigue
, restoration of bowel function (flatus, bowel movement and food intake) and the time until the patients were self-aided at their preoperative level, was not reduced by epidural analgesia. Since 50% of the patients in each group suffered from one or more of the above-mentioned postoperative complications, this epidural regimen was not effective in reducing postoperative morbidity after major abdominal surgery despite the achievement of adequate pain relief.
...
PMID:A controlled study on the effect of epidural analgesia with local anaesthetics and morphine on morbidity after abdominal surgery. 408 79
Postoperative
fatigue
(POF) appears to be less following laparoscopic surgery but this has not been proven previously. This study compared a group of patients who had undergone open cholecystectomy with a group undergoing laparoscopic cholecystectomy. Postoperative
fatigue
was found to be decreased in duration in the patients having laparoscopic surgery, returning to pre-operative
fatigue
levels by 14 days, compared to 28 days for open surgery.
Postoperative pain
in the first 24 h and the early metabolic response to surgery were similar for both groups. The authors conclude that laparoscopic surgery is associated with decreased POF and that this is unlikely to be accounted for by a decrease in the early metabolic response to surgery.
...
PMID:Postoperative fatigue after laparoscopic surgery. 828 7
The 'French' and 'American' techniques of laparoscopic cholecystectomy, which differ in the position of the surgeon and ports, have not been compared directly. The authors' hypothesis was that the 'French' technique results in better postoperative pulmonary function than the 'American' technique. Patients undergoing elective cholecystectomy were randomized, 25 patients to have the 'French' method and 24 the 'American' method. Forced vital capacity (FVC) and forced expiratory volume in 1 s (FEV1) were measured before operation, and 6, 24 and 48 h after surgery.
Postoperative pain
and
fatigue
were also measured. Both FVC and FEV1 at 6 h, 24 h and 48 h after operation were significantly less in the 'American' group (FVC at 24 h: 71 versus 86 per cent of preoperative value; P = 0.001, Student's t test; 95 per cent confidence interval 7-24). Two cases of atelectasis occurred in the 'American' group and none in the 'French' group. Differences in access to Calot's triangle were also noted. One patient in the 'French' group sustained a diathermy injury of the duodenum, related to defective equipment. It is concluded that the 'French' method leads to less impairment of pulmonary function.
...
PMID:Randomized comparison of pulmonary function after the 'French' and 'American' techniques of laparoscopic cholecystectomy. 881 79
To compare pulmonary effects, postoperative pain and
fatigue
, morbidity, patient satisfaction, and cost of different anesthetic techniques for inguinal hernia repair, 50 patients were randomized to local and general anesthesia groups (LA and GA). All patients received the same premedications and the same postoperative analgesic regimen. The standardized postoperative analgesic, intramuscular pyroxicam 20 mg, was given to all patients in the recovery room and an additional 20 mg on the same day was given as requested by each patient. Pulmonary function studies and arterial blood gas analysis were performed 1 h prior to the operation and at the postoperative 8th and 24th hours. All patients underwent Lichtenstein's tension-free hernioplasty.
Postoperative pain
and
fatigue
were registered 8 h and 24 h after the operation. A questionnaire was filled out by the patients, and they were asked to give grades for the general comfort of the anesthesia and the surgical procedure (1 = worst, 10 = best). Postoperative pulmonary function tests were significantly poorer in the GA group both on 8th- and 24th-hour measurements (P < 0.05). Patients who underwent LA had significantly lower PCO2 and higher PO2 at the postoperative 8th hour (P<0.05). Mean postoperative pain and
fatigue
scores revealed a significant difference in favor of local anesthesia at only the 8th hour (P<0.05). There were two complications, one in each group (a hematoma in LA and a urinary retention in GA). Patient satisfaction grades were not different in the two groups. We conclude that LA in inguinal hernia repair does not adversely affect pulmonary functions, patients feel less pain, and patient satisfaction is comparable to that with GA.
...
PMID:Comparison of local and general anesthesia in tension-free (Lichtenstein) hernioplasty: a prospective randomized trial. 1209 May 78
A literature review regarding symptoms and recommendations in relation to e.g. driving and physical activity precautions during the recovery period following coronary artery bypass and/or valve surgery was performed.
Postoperative pain
,
fatigue
, anxiety, depression, sleeping problems and neurocognitive impairment affecting daily living are common. Every patient should be offered individually tailored cardiac rehabilitation. Patients should be on sick leave for 4-8 weeks following sternotomy. Recommendations during convalescence are based on a low level of evidence.
...
PMID:[Convalescence and sick leave following cardiac surgery]. 1981 40