Emerging research suggests that pain may persist longer-term for many children after major surgery, with significant impact on their health outcomes. This systematic review identified the prevalence of chronic postsurgical pain (CPSP) in children after surgery, and determined presurgical biomedical and psychosocial risk factors associated with CPSP prevalence or severity. Prospective studies assessing CPSP 3–12 months after surgery in children 6–18 years of age published in English in MEDLINE, EMBASE, PsycINFO, and Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews since 1996 were eligible for inclusion. Of 16,084 abstracts yielded by the search, 123 full manuscripts were assessed for eligibility, and 12 studies were included in the review. Overall quality of included studies assessed using the Quality in Prognostic Studies tool was low. Based on 4 studies with a total of 628 participants across all surgery types, median prevalence of CPSP across studies was 20% (25th percentile=14.5%, 75th percentile=38%) at 12 months after surgery. Presurgical pain intensity, child anxiety, child pain coping efficacy, and parental pain catastrophizing were the only presurgical factors identified as predictive of CPSP. Biological and medical factors assessed were not associated with CPSP in any study. Well-designed studies examining prevalence and predictors of CPSP are critically needed in children.
The sympathetic nervous system plays a key role in regulating arterial blood pressure in humans. This review provides an overview of sympathetic neural control of the circulation and discusses the changes that occur in various disease states, including hypertension, heart failure, and obstructive sleep apnea. It focuses on measurements of sympathetic neural activity (SNA) obtained by microneurography, a technique that allows direct assessment of the electrical activity of sympathetic nerves in conscious human beings. Sympathetic neural activity is tightly linked to blood pressure via the baroreflex for each individual person. However, SNA can vary greatly among individuals and that variability is not related to resting blood pressure; that is, the blood pressure of a person with high SNA can be similar to that of a person with much lower SNA. In healthy normotensive persons, this finding appears to be related to a set of factors that balance the variability in SNA, including cardiac output and vascular adrenergic responsiveness. Measurements of SNA are very reproducible in a given person over a period of several months to a few years, but SNA increases progressively with healthy aging. Cardiovascular disease can be associated with substantial increases in SNA, as seen for example in patients with hypertension, obstructive sleep apnea, or heart failure. Obesity is also associated with an increase in SNA, but the increase in SNA among patients with obstructive sleep apnea appears to be independent of obesity per se. For several disease states, successful treatment is associated with both a decrease in sympathoexcitation and an improvement in prognosis. This finding points to an important link between altered sympathetic neural mechanisms and the fundamental processes of cardiovascular disease.
The risk of MACEs with NCS after DES placement was not significantly associated with time from stenting to surgery, but observed rates of MACEs were lowest after 1 yr.
Limited research has examined presurgical risk factors for poor outcomes in children after major surgery. This longitudinal study examined presurgical psychosocial and behavioral factors as predictors of acute postsurgical pain intensity and health-related quality of life (HRQOL) in children 2 weeks after major surgery. Sixty children aged 10–18 years, 66.7% female, and their parent/guardian participated in the study. Children underwent baseline assessment of pain (daily electronic diary), HRQOL, sleep (actigraphy), and psychosocial factors (anxiety, pain catastrophizing). Caregivers reported on parental pain catastrophizing. Longitudinal follow-up assessment of pain and HRQOL was conducted at home 2 weeks after surgery. Regression analyses adjusting for baseline pain revealed that presurgery sleep duration (β=−.26, p<.05), and parental pain catastrophizing (β=.28, p<.05) were significantly associated with mean pain intensity reported by children 2 weeks after surgery, with shorter presurgery sleep duration and greater parental catastrophizing about child pain predicting greater pain intensity. Adjusting for baseline HRQOL, presurgery child state anxiety (β=−.29, p<.05) was significantly associated with HRQOL at 2 weeks, with greater anxiety predicting poorer HRQOL after surgery. In conclusion, child anxiety, parental pain catastrophizing, and sleep patterns are potentially modifiable factors which predict poor outcomes in children after major surgery.
Perspective
This study addresses an important gap in literature, examining presurgical risk factors for poorer acute postsurgical outcomes in children undergoing major surgery. Knowledge of these factors will enable presurgical identification of children at risk for poorer outcomes and guide further research developing prevention and intervention strategies for these children.
The prevalence of moderate-severe pain in hospitalized children remains high. Analgesia regimens may not be optimal. Underutilization of regional anesthesia techniques may have contributed to increased pain scores. A large proportion of children diagnosed with moderate-severe pain may have persistent clinically significant pain in subsequent days.
The number and rate of ambulatory anesthesia episodes for US children increased dramatically over a decade. This study provides an example of how databases can provide useful information to health care policy makers and educators on the utilization of ambulatory surgical centers by children.
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