After short-stay anorectal surgery, patients exhibited three distinct pain trajectories (high-low 57.0%, low 23.3%, low-moderate-low 19.7%), with 62.7% maintaining moderate-to-high pain for 7 days.
Observational (n=217)
No
Benign perianal diseases (hemorrhoids and anorectal fistula) (n=217)
Short-stay anorectal surgery
VAS score from days 1 to 10 after the operation
Abstract OBJECTIVE: The dense distribution of perianal nerves, having to defecate, and underappreciated analgesia make the postoperative pain of anorectal surgery significantly serious. However, the evolution of pain after anorectal surgery has not been well characterized. The main objective is to evaluate patterns in acute postoperative pain in patients undergoing short-stay anorectal surgery.The main objective is to evaluate patterns in acute postoperative pain in patients undergoing short-stay anorectal surgery. Methods: The study included 217 patients who underwent anorectal surgery for hemorrhoids and anorectal fistula. The VAS pain scale was used to record the pain across postoperative days 1 through 10. The primary analysis used group-based trajectory modeling to estimate the trajectory of postoperative pain. Secondary analysis examined the relationships between sociodemographic, types of surgery, preoperative anxiety score and pain behavior score, and postoperative analgesics and pain trajectories. RESULTS : Three distinct postoperative pain trajectories were determined. Many patients (57.0%) belonged to the high-low group, followed by the low group (23.3%) and the low-moderate-low group (19.7%). Moreover, 62.7% of patients reported pain stable and sustained moderate-to-high over the first 7 days after surgery, while 97% had decreased to mild pain by the 10th day. Hemorrhoidectomy (odds ratio, 0.15), higher anxiety (odds ratio, 3.26), and higher preoperative pain behavior score (odds ratio, 3.15), were associated with an increased likelihood of being in the high pain trajectory in multivariate analysis. The pain trajectory group was related to postoperative analgesic use (P<0.001), with the high-low group needing more nonsteroidal analgesics. CONCLUSIONS: There are three obvious pain trajectories after anorectal surgery for hemorrhoids and anal fistula, including an unreported low-moderate-low type. More than 60% of patients maintained moderate and severe pain within 7 days after the operation. These postoperative pain trajectories were predominantly defined by surgery factors and patient factors.
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Yujiao Zhang
Tianjin Medical University General Hospital
Lili Li
Guangxi University
Yue Yong
Shanghai University of Traditional Chinese Medicine
Shanghai University of Traditional Chinese Medicine
Shuguang Hospital
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Zhang et al. (Tue,) conducted a observational in Benign perianal diseases (hemorrhoids and anorectal fistula) (n=217). Short-stay anorectal surgery was evaluated on VAS score from days 1 to 10 after the operation. After short-stay anorectal surgery, patients exhibited three distinct pain trajectories (high-low 57.0%, low 23.3%, low-moderate-low 19.7%), with 62.7% maintaining moderate-to-high pain for 7 days.
synapsesocial.com/papers/6a1c3866ea84844e355f9a7e — DOI: https://doi.org/10.21203/rs.3.rs-2276220/v1
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