2.Multimodal prehabilitation before major abdominal surgery: A retrospective study.
Ning Qi PANG ; Stephanie Shengjie HE ; Joel Qi Xuan FOO ; Natalie Hui Ying KOH ; Tin Wei YUEN ; Ming Na LIEW ; John Peter RAMYA ; Yijun LOY ; Glenn Kunnath BONNEY ; Wai Kit CHEONG ; Shridhar Ganpathi IYER ; Ker Kan TAN ; Wan Chin LIM ; Alfred Wei Chieh KOW
Annals of the Academy of Medicine, Singapore 2021;50(12):892-902
INTRODUCTION:
Prehabilitation may benefit older patients undergoing major surgeries. Currently, its efficacy has not been conclusively proven. This is a retrospective review of a multimodal prehabilitation programme.
METHODS:
Patients aged 65 years and above undergoing major abdominal surgery between May 2015 and December 2019 in the National University Hospital were included in our institutional programme that incorporated aspects of multimodal prehabilitation and Enhanced Recovery After Surgery concepts as 1 holistic perioperative pathway to deal with issues specific to older patients. Physical therapy, nutritional advice and psychosocial support were provided as part of prehabilitation.
RESULTS:
There were 335 patients in the prehabilitation cohort and 256 patients whose records were reviewed as control. No difference in postoperative length of stay (
CONCLUSION
The current study found no differences in traditional surgical outcome measures with and without prehabilitation. An increase in patient mobility in the immediate postoperative period was noted with prehabilitation, as well as an association between prehabilitation and increased adherence to postoperative adjuvant therapy. Larger prospective studies will be needed to validate the findings of this retrospective review.
Humans
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Postoperative Complications/prevention & control*
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Preoperative Care
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Preoperative Exercise
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Prospective Studies
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Retrospective Studies
3.Prehabilitation for gastrointestinal cancer patients.
Chinese Journal of Gastrointestinal Surgery 2021;24(2):122-127
Gastrointestinal cancer and related treatments (surgery and chemoradiotherapy) are associated with declined functional status (FS) that has impact on quality of life, clinical outcome and continuum of care. Psychological distress drives an impressive burden of physiological and psychiatric conditions in oncologic care. Cancer patients often experience anxiety, depression, low self-esteem and fears of recurrence and death. Cancer prehabilitation is a process from cancer diagnosis to the beginning of treatment, which includes psychological, physical and nutritional assessments for a baseline functional level, identification of comorbidity, and targeted interventions that improve patient's health and functional capacity to reduce the incidence and the severity of current and future impairments with cancer, chemoradiotherapy and surgery. Multimodal prehabilitation program encompasses a series of planned, structured, repeatable and purposive interventions including comprehensive physical exercise, nutritional therapy, and relieving anxiety and depression, which integrates into best perioperative management ERAS pathway and aims at using the preoperative period to prevent or attenuate the surgery-related functional decline, to cope with surgical stress and to improve the consequences. However, a number of questions remain in regards to prehabilitation in gastrointestinal cancer surgery, which consists of the optimal makeup of training programs, the timing and approach of the intervention, how to improve compliance, how to measure functional capacity, and how to make cost-effective analysis. Therefore, more high-level evidence-based studies are expected to evaluate the value of implementation of prehabilitation into standard practice.
Chemoradiotherapy/adverse effects*
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Digestive System Surgical Procedures/psychology*
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Gastrointestinal Neoplasms/therapy*
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Humans
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Preoperative Care
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Preoperative Exercise
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Quality of Life
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Recovery of Function
4.Implementation of the pre-operative rehabilitation recovery protocol and its effect on the quality of recovery after colorectal surgeries.
Li-Hua PENG ; Wen-Jian WANG ; Jing CHEN ; Ju-Ying JIN ; Su MIN ; Pei-Pei QIN
Chinese Medical Journal 2021;134(23):2865-2873
BACKGROUND:
Patients' recovery after surgery is the major concern for all perioperative clinicians. This study aims to minimize the side effects of peri-operative surgical stress and accelerate patients' recovery of gastrointestinal (GI) function and quality of life after colorectal surgeries, an enhanced recovery protocol based on pre-operative rehabilitation was implemented and its effect was explored.
METHODS:
A prospective randomized controlled clinical trial was conducted, patients were recruited from January 2018 to September 2019 in this study. Patients scheduled for elective colorectal surgeries were randomly allocated to receive either standardized enhanced recovery after surgery (S-ERAS) group or enhanced recovery after surgery based on pre-operative rehabilitation (group PR-ERAS). In the group PR-ERAS, on top of recommended peri-operative strategies for enhanced recovery, formatted rehabilitation exercises pre-operatively were carried out. The primary outcome was the quality of GI recovery measured with I-FEED scoring. Secondary outcomes were quality of life scores and strength of handgrip; the incidence of adverse events till 30 days post-operatively was also analyzed.
RESULTS:
A total of 240 patients were scrutinized and 213 eligible patients were enrolled, who were randomly allocated to the group S-ERAS (n = 104) and group PR-ERAS (n = 109). The percentage of normal recovery graded by I-FEED scoring was higher in group PR-ERAS (79.0% vs. 64.3%, P < 0.050). The subscores of life ability and physical well-being at post-operative 72 h were significantly improved in the group PR-ERAS using quality of recovery score (QOR-40) questionnaire (P < 0.050). The strength of hand grip post-operatively was also improved in the group PR-ERAS (P < 0.050). The incidence of bowel-related and other adverse events was similar in both groups till 30 days post-operatively (P > 0.050).
CONCLUSIONS:
Peri-operative rehabilitation exercise might be another benevolent factor for early recovery of GI function and life of quality after colorectal surgery. Newer, more surgery-specific rehabilitation recovery protocol merits further exploration for these patients.
TRIAL REGISTRATION
ChiCTR.org.cn, ChiCTR-ONRC-14005096.
Colorectal Neoplasms
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Hand Strength
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Humans
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Length of Stay
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Postoperative Complications
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Preoperative Exercise
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Quality of Life
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Randomized Controlled Trials as Topic
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Recovery of Function
5.The Role of Cardiopulmonary Exercise Test in Mitral and Aortic Regurgitation: It Can Predict Post-Operative Results.
Hyun Joong KIM ; Seung Woo PARK ; Byung Ryul CHO ; Sun Hee HONG ; Pyo Won PARK ; Kyung Pyo HONG
The Korean Journal of Internal Medicine 2003;18(1):35-39
BACKGROUND: We evaluated the efficacy of the cardiopulmonary exercise test as an objective indicator of functional status and as a pre-operative prognostic indicator in patients with mitral regurgitation (MR) and aortic regurgitation (AR). METHODS: Cardiopulmonary exercise tests and echocardiography were performed in 47 patients (MR: 30, AR: 15, MR + AR: 2) before surgery and repeated one year after surgery. We compared the New York Heart Association (NYHA) functional class, peak oxygen consumption rate (VO2peak), exercise duration, left ventricular dimension and ejection fraction, before and after surgery. RESULTS: Initial VO2peak and exercise duration were significantly different according to NYHA class. A year later, NYHA functional class improved from 2.1+/-0.1 to 1.4+/-0.1 (p< 0.001). The VO2peak was significantly increased (21.7+/-1.0 to 23.7+/-1.0 mL/kg per min, p=0.008) and exercise duration also increased (521.7+/-35.9 to 623.3+/-35.7 seconds, p< 0.001). When patients were analysed according to their post-operative NYHA functional class, those with class I showed significantly different pre-operative VO2peak (class I: 23.7+/-1.1, II: 18.3+/-1.5 mL/kg per min, p=0.005) and exercise durations (class I: 587.5+/-43.2, II: 415.6+/-55.7 seconds, p=0.02). Patients with higher pre-operative VO2peak (19.0 mL/kg per min) more frequently became NYHA functional class I than those with a lower pre-operative VO2peak (76.7% vs. 35.3%, p=0.02). But baseline left ventricular dimension and ejection fraction by echocardiography were not different between post-operative class I and II group. CONCLUSION: VO2peak and exercise duration are excellent parameters to evaluate the subjective functional class and to predict the post-operative functional class of patients with MR and/or AR. Patients with a pre-operative VO2peak of 19.0 mL/kg per min or more will have a better functional status one year after surgery.
Adult
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Aortic Valve Insufficiency/diagnosis/*surgery
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Chi-Square Distribution
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Cohort Studies
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Exercise Test
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Exercise Tolerance
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Female
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Follow-Up Studies
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Heart Valve Prosthesis Implantation/*methods
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Humans
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Male
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Middle Aged
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Mitral Valve Insufficiency/diagnosis/*surgery
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Oxygen Consumption
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Postoperative Period
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Preoperative Care
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Probability
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Prospective Studies
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Pulmonary Gas Exchange
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Severity of Illness Index
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Statistics, Nonparametric
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Stroke Volume
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Treatment Outcome