1.The effect of abdominal visceral fat area on perioperative complications and pancreatic fistula in primary gastric carcinoma patients after laparoscopic assisted radical gastrectomy
Qing TIAN ; Xiaolin HU ; Shijiang LIU ; Huiming LIU ; Kai LIU ; Yong FENG
Chinese Journal of General Surgery 2023;38(5):357-361
Objective:To study the effect of visceral fat area (VFA) on postoperative complications and pancreatic fistula in patients undergoing laparoscopic assisted radical gastrectomy for gastric careinoma.Methods:Clnical data of 214 primary gastric cancer patients undergoing laparoscopic assisted radical gastrectomy between Jan 2017 and Jan 2022 at the Department of General Surgery, Shouguang People's Hospital were retrospectively reviewed.Results:There were 85 patients in high VFA group and 129 patients in the low VFA group. The body mass index (25.1±3.4) kg/m 2 and visceral fat area (143.4±41.1) cm 2 in the high VFA group were higher than those in the low VFA group (21.2±2.9) kg/m 2 and visceral fat area (58.7±31.9) cm 2. The operative time was (228.3±53.1) min vs. (206.3±62.9) min ( t=5.538, P=0.017). The intraoperative blood loss was (264.6±173.6) ml vs. (213.9±156.2) ml ( t=3.373, P=0.035). The postoperative hospital stay was (12.5±4.0) d vs. (10.3±3.7) d ( t=7.781, P=0.013). Twenty-three cases developed postoperative complications in the high VFA group vs. 20 cases in the low VFA group ( χ2=4.261, P=0.039). Patients in the high VFA group had an incidence of clinically relevant pancreatic fistula of 10.6% vs. 3.1% in patients in the low VFA group ( χ2=5.034, P=0.038). Univariate and multivariate analysis of clinically relevant pancreatic fistulas in patients with different VFA groups showed that men ≥134.6 cm 2 and women ≥91.1 cm 2 with VFA and operative time ≥250 min were independent risk factors for the occurence of clinically relevant pancreatic fistulas after laparoscopic assisted radical gastrectomy. Conclusions:VFA increases the difficulty of laparoscopic-assisted radical gastrectomy, resulting in increased postoperative complications. VFA and operation time are independent risk factors for clinically relevant pancreatic fistula after radical gastrectomy for gastric cancer.
2.Accuracy analysis of amylase, C-reactive protein and procalcitonin in abdominal cavity of postoperative gastric cancer in predicting the occurrence of clinically related pancreatic fistula
Qing TIAN ; Yong FENG ; Shijiang LIU ; Huiming LIU ; Kai LIU ; Xiaolin HU
International Journal of Surgery 2022;49(5):333-337,C2
Objective:To evaluate the relationship between abdominal amylase, C-reactive protein (CRP), procalcitonin (PCT) and clinically relevant pancreatic fistula in the early stage after radical gastrectomy for gastric cancer, and to explore whether they can be used as early predictors of pancreatic fistula and their accuracy, in order to help identify pancreatic fistula in the early stage after gastrectomy.Methods:The clinical data of 372 patients diagnosed as gastric cancer and underwent gastrectomy in Shouguang People′s Hospital from January 2017 to December 2021 were retrospectively analyzed, including 190 males and 182 femals, aged from 28 to 32 years old, with the average years of 63.5±10.6. The receiver operating characteristic (ROC) curves of abdominal amylase on the first day and serum CRP and procalcitonin on the third day after surgery for gastric cancer were analyzed. The ROC curve was used to determine the optimal cutoff value and the sensitivity, specificity, positive and negative predictions, and accuracy of the optimal cutoff value were calculated. Single factor and multivariate analysis were used to analyze the risk factors of pancreatic fistula after gastric cancer surgery. SPSS 25.0 software was used for statistical analysis.Results:The incidence of clinically relevant pancreatic fistula after surgery for gastric cancer was 5.37%(20/372), including 18 cases of grade B pancreatic fistula and 2 cases of grade C pancreatic fistula. The critical values of amylase on the first postoperative day of clinically relevant pancreatic fistula after surgery for gastric cancer are predicted to be 2036 U/L, serum CRP 18 mg/dL, and procalcitonin 0.85 μg/L. In univariate analysis, body mass index, abdominal amylase concentration on the 1st postoperative day, serum CRP and procalcitonin on the 3rd postoperative day were the influencing factors for the occurance of pancreatic fistula after gastric cancer surgery. Multivariate Logistic regression analysis showed that body mass index>25 kg/m 2, abdominal amylase >2036 U/L on the first postoperative day and serum CRP>18 mg/dL on the third postoperative day were the independent predictors for pancreatic fistula. The sensitivity and specificity of the combination of intraperitoneal amylase on the first day and serum CRP on the third day after surgery for gastric cancer in predicting the occurrence of clinically relevant pancreatic fistula were 87.6% and 90.4%, respectively. Conclusions:The combination of amylase in abdominal cavity on the 1st day and CRP on the 3rd day after radical gastrectomy has high sensitivity and specificity in predicting clinically related pancreatic fistula. PCT on the 3rd day after gastric cancer surgery has limited accuracy in predicting clinically related pancreatic fistula, so it is not recommended as an early prediction index of pancreatic fistula after gastric cancer surgery.
3.Related factors affecting the occurrence of severe pancreatic fistula after radical gastrectomy
Qing TIAN ; Yong FENG ; Shijiang LIU ; Huiming LIU ; Kai LIU ; Xiaolin HU
Chinese Journal of Primary Medicine and Pharmacy 2022;29(10):1510-1514
Objective:To investigate the related factors that affect the occurrence of severe pancreatic fistula after radical gastrectomy.Methods:The clinical data of 460 patients undergoing radical gastrectomy in The People's Hospital of Shouguang from January 2015 to January 2021 were retrospectively analyzed. These patients were divided into severe pancreatic fistula group ( n = 24) and non-severe pancreatic fistula group ( n = 436) according to whether they developed severe pancreatic fistula after surgery. Preoperative clinical data, surgical data, and abdominal drainage fluid amylase level in the first postoperative days were compared. The receiver operating characteristics (ROC) curve was used to calculate the cutoff value of abdominal drainage fluid amylase level on the 1 st and 3 rd days of developing severe pancreatic fistula after radical gastrectomy. The incidence of pancreatic fistula was compared between different amylase level groups. Multivariate logistic regression was performed to analyze the independent risk factors of severe pancreatic fistula after surgery. Results:There were significant differences in body mass index, operative time, intraoperative blood loss, peritoneal drainage fluid amylase level on the 1 st and 3 rd days after surgery, and the number of cases undergoing splenectomy between the two groups (all P < 0.05). The cutoff values of amylase level in peritoneal drainage fluid (D-AMY) on the 1 st and 3 rd days after surgery were 2 156 IU/L and 596 IU/L respectively, which had high sensitivity and specificity. On the 1 st and 3 rd days after surgery, the incidence of pancreatic fistula in the high-level amylase group was significantly higher than that in the low-level amylase group [26.2% (16/61) vs. 0.8% (3/334), χ2 = 62.82, P < 0.05). Multivariate logistic analysis showed that obesity, splenectomy, and abdominal drainage fluid amylase level higher than the cut-off value on the 1 st and 3 rd days after surgery were independent risk factors for severe pancreatic fistula, and the differences were statistically significant (all P < 0.05). Conclusion:Obesity, splenectomy, and abdominal drainage fluid amylase level higher than the cut-off value on the 1 st and 3 rd days after surgery are independent risk factors affecting the occurrence of severe pancreatic fistula. D-AMY (> 2 156 IU/L) on the 1 st day and D-AMY (> 596 IU/L) on the 3 rd day in the early postoperative days can be used as cutoff values to predict the occurrence of severe pancreatic fistula after radical gastrectomy.
4.Impaired Parahippocampal Gyrus-Orbitofrontal Cortex Circuit Associated with Visuospatial Memory Deficit as a Potential Biomarker and Interventional Approach for Alzheimer Disease.
Lin ZHU ; Zan WANG ; Zhanhong DU ; Xinyang QI ; Hao SHU ; Duan LIU ; Fan SU ; Qing YE ; Xuemei LIU ; Zheng ZHOU ; Yongqiang TANG ; Ru SONG ; Xiaobin WANG ; Li LIN ; Shijiang LI ; Ying HAN ; Liping WANG ; Zhijun ZHANG
Neuroscience Bulletin 2020;36(8):831-844
The parahippocampal gyrus-orbitofrontal cortex (PHG-OFC) circuit in humans is homologous to the postrhinal cortex (POR)-ventral lateral orbitofrontal cortex (vlOFC) circuit in rodents. Both are associated with visuospatial malfunctions in Alzheimer's disease (AD). However, the underlying mechanisms remain to be elucidated. In this study, we explored the relationship between an impaired POR-vlOFC circuit and visuospatial memory deficits through retrograde tracing and in vivo local field potential recordings in 5XFAD mice, and investigated alterations of the PHG-OFC circuit by multi-domain magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) in patients on the AD spectrum. We demonstrated that an impaired glutamatergic POR-vlOFC circuit resulted in deficient visuospatial memory in 5XFAD mice. Moreover, MRI measurements of the PHG-OFC circuit had an accuracy of 77.33% for the classification of amnestic mild cognitive impairment converters versus non-converters. Thus, the PHG-OFC circuit explains the neuroanatomical basis of visuospatial memory deficits in AD, thereby providing a potential predictor for AD progression and a promising interventional approach for AD.
5.Epidemiological characteristic and current status of surgical treatment for esophageal cancer by analysis of national registry database
Yousheng MAO ; Shugeng GAO ; Qun WANG ; Xiaotian SHI ; Yin LI ; Wenjun GAO ; Fushun GUAN ; Xiaofei LI ; Yongtao HAN ; Yongyu LIU ; Junfeng LIU ; Kang ZHANG ; Shuoyan LIU ; Xiangning FU ; Wentao FANG ; Longqi CHEN ; Qingchen WU ; Gaoming XIAO ; Keneng CHEN ; Guanggen JIAO ; Shijiang ZHANG ; Weimin MAO ; Tiehua RONG ; Jianhua FU ; Lijie TAN ; Chun CHEN ; Shidong XU ; Shiping GUO ; Zhentao YU ; Jian HU ; Zhendong HU ; Yikun YANG ; Ningning DING ; Ding YANG ; Jie HE
Chinese Journal of Oncology 2020;42(3):228-233
Objective:To investigate the epidemiological characteristics and current status of surgical management for esophageal cancer in China.Methods:A national database was setup through a network platform. The clinical data of esophageal cancer treated by surgery was collected from 70 major hospitals in China between January 2009 and December 2014.Results:Complete data of 8 181 cases of esophageal cancer patients who underwent surgery were recorded in the database and recruited in the analysis. Among them, 6 052 cases were male and 2 129 were female, the average age was 60.5 years.The epidemiological investigation results showed that 148 cases (1.8%) had history of psychological trauma, 7 527 cases (92.0%) were lower social economic status, 5 072 cases (62.0%) were short of fresh vegetables and fruits, 6 544 cases (80.0%) ate rough food frequently, 3 722 cases (45.5%) drank untreated water directly from lake or river or shallow well, 3 436 cases (42.0%) had a unhealthy eating habit, including habits of eating food fast (507 cases, 6.2%), eating hot food or drinking hot tea/soup (998 cases, 12.2%), eating fried food (1 939 cases, 23.7%), 4 410 cases (53.9%) had the habits of smoking cigarettes and 2 822 cases (34.5%) drank white wine frequently.The pathological results showed that 7 813 cases (95.5%) were squamous cell carcinoma, 267 cases were adenocarcinoma (3.3%), 25 cases were adenosquamous cell carcinoma (0.3%) and 50 cases were small cell carcinoma (0.6%). A total of 1 800 cases (22.0%) received preoperative neoadjuvant therapy due to locally advanced disease or difficulty of resection. The esophagectomies were performed through left thoracotomy approach in 5 870 cases (71.8%), through right chest approach in 2 215 cases (27.1%), and the remain 96 cases (1.2%) received surgery though other approaches.A total of 8 001 cases (97.8%) underwent radical resection, the other 180 cases (2.2%) received palliative resection. The 30-day postoperative mortality rate was 0.5%, the overall ≥ grade Ⅱ postoperative complication rate was 11.6% (951 cases). The 1-yr, 3-yr, and 5-yr overall actual survival rates were 82.6%, 61.6%, and 52.9%, respectively.Conclusions:The data analysis of the national database for esophageal cancer shows that bad eating habits or eating rough food without enough nutrients, lower social and economic status, drinking white wine and smoking cigarettes frequently may be correlated with tumorigenesis of esophageal cancer. However, strong evidences produced by prospective observation studies are needed. Overall, the long-term survival of esophageal cancer patients has been improved gradually due to the application of advanced surgical techniques and reasonable multimodality treatment.
6.Epidemiological characteristic and current status of surgical treatment for esophageal cancer by analysis of national registry database
Yousheng MAO ; Shugeng GAO ; Qun WANG ; Xiaotian SHI ; Yin LI ; Wenjun GAO ; Fushun GUAN ; Xiaofei LI ; Yongtao HAN ; Yongyu LIU ; Junfeng LIU ; Kang ZHANG ; Shuoyan LIU ; Xiangning FU ; Wentao FANG ; Longqi CHEN ; Qingchen WU ; Gaoming XIAO ; Keneng CHEN ; Guanggen JIAO ; Shijiang ZHANG ; Weimin MAO ; Tiehua RONG ; Jianhua FU ; Lijie TAN ; Chun CHEN ; Shidong XU ; Shiping GUO ; Zhentao YU ; Jian HU ; Zhendong HU ; Yikun YANG ; Ningning DING ; Ding YANG ; Jie HE
Chinese Journal of Oncology 2020;42(3):228-233
Objective:To investigate the epidemiological characteristics and current status of surgical management for esophageal cancer in China.Methods:A national database was setup through a network platform. The clinical data of esophageal cancer treated by surgery was collected from 70 major hospitals in China between January 2009 and December 2014.Results:Complete data of 8 181 cases of esophageal cancer patients who underwent surgery were recorded in the database and recruited in the analysis. Among them, 6 052 cases were male and 2 129 were female, the average age was 60.5 years.The epidemiological investigation results showed that 148 cases (1.8%) had history of psychological trauma, 7 527 cases (92.0%) were lower social economic status, 5 072 cases (62.0%) were short of fresh vegetables and fruits, 6 544 cases (80.0%) ate rough food frequently, 3 722 cases (45.5%) drank untreated water directly from lake or river or shallow well, 3 436 cases (42.0%) had a unhealthy eating habit, including habits of eating food fast (507 cases, 6.2%), eating hot food or drinking hot tea/soup (998 cases, 12.2%), eating fried food (1 939 cases, 23.7%), 4 410 cases (53.9%) had the habits of smoking cigarettes and 2 822 cases (34.5%) drank white wine frequently.The pathological results showed that 7 813 cases (95.5%) were squamous cell carcinoma, 267 cases were adenocarcinoma (3.3%), 25 cases were adenosquamous cell carcinoma (0.3%) and 50 cases were small cell carcinoma (0.6%). A total of 1 800 cases (22.0%) received preoperative neoadjuvant therapy due to locally advanced disease or difficulty of resection. The esophagectomies were performed through left thoracotomy approach in 5 870 cases (71.8%), through right chest approach in 2 215 cases (27.1%), and the remain 96 cases (1.2%) received surgery though other approaches.A total of 8 001 cases (97.8%) underwent radical resection, the other 180 cases (2.2%) received palliative resection. The 30-day postoperative mortality rate was 0.5%, the overall ≥ grade Ⅱ postoperative complication rate was 11.6% (951 cases). The 1-yr, 3-yr, and 5-yr overall actual survival rates were 82.6%, 61.6%, and 52.9%, respectively.Conclusions:The data analysis of the national database for esophageal cancer shows that bad eating habits or eating rough food without enough nutrients, lower social and economic status, drinking white wine and smoking cigarettes frequently may be correlated with tumorigenesis of esophageal cancer. However, strong evidences produced by prospective observation studies are needed. Overall, the long-term survival of esophageal cancer patients has been improved gradually due to the application of advanced surgical techniques and reasonable multimodality treatment.
7.The Glutamatergic Postrhinal Cortex-Ventrolateral Orbitofrontal Cortex Pathway Regulates Spatial Memory Retrieval.
Xinyang QI ; Zhanhong Jeff DU ; Lin ZHU ; Xuemei LIU ; Hua XU ; Zheng ZHOU ; Cheng ZHONG ; Shijiang LI ; Liping WANG ; Zhijun ZHANG
Neuroscience Bulletin 2019;35(3):447-460
A deficit in spatial memory has been taken as an early predictor of Alzheimer's disease (AD) or mild cognitive impairment (MCI). The uncinate fasciculus (UF) is a long-range white-matter tract that connects the anterior temporal lobe with the orbitofrontal cortex (OFC) in primates. Previous studies have shown that the UF impairment associated with spatial memory deficits may be an important pathological change in aging and AD, but its exact role in spatial memory is not well understood. The pathway arising from the postrhinal cortex (POR) and projecting to the ventrolateral orbitofrontal cortex (vlOFC) performs most of the functions of the UF in rodents. Although the literature suggests an association between spatial memory and the regions connected by the POR-vlOFC pathway, the function of the pathway in spatial memory is relatively unknown. To further illuminate the function of the UF in spatial memory, we dissected the POR-vlOFC pathway in mice. We determined that the POR-vlOFC pathway is a glutamatergic structure, and that glutamatergic neurons in the POR regulate spatial memory retrieval. We also demonstrated that the POR-vlOFC pathway specifically transmits spatial information to participate in memory retrieval. These findings provide a deeper understanding of UF function and dysfunction related to disorders of memory, as in MCI and AD.
Animals
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Glutamic Acid
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physiology
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Male
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Mental Recall
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physiology
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Mice, Inbred C57BL
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Neural Pathways
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cytology
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physiology
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Neuroanatomical Tract-Tracing Techniques
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Neurons
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physiology
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Prefrontal Cortex
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cytology
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physiology
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Spatial Memory
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physiology
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Temporal Lobe
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cytology
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physiology
8.Magnetic resonance study on the binding ability between targeted neuropilin-1 probe and ectopic glioma in mice
Xinxin WANG ; Yuheng SHAN ; Chunrong LIU ; Shijiang ZHONG
Chinese Journal of Behavioral Medicine and Brain Science 2018;27(5):395-399
Objective To detect the binding ability of the molecular probe of neuropilin-1( NRP-1) to mouse ectopic glioma by magnetic resonance imaging ( MRI) . Methods Glioma model mice were pre-pared by glioma tissue transplantation.Thirty tumor bearing mice were randomly selected for tissue anatomy(n=12) and other 18 mice were randomly divided into 3 groups:the control group ( group A) ,the probe con-trol group (group B) and the probe group (group C),which were given 20 μl saline,20 μl USPIO-PEG, 20μl USPIO-PEG-tLyP-1 through the tail vein of the mice respectively.And at 0h,6h,12h,24h after admin-istration,T2WI and T2MAPPING sequences were detected by MRI. Then the tumor bearing mice were killed immediately and the glioma tissue was used to detect the iron content by Prussian blue staining to detect the binding ability of the glioma tissue with the new molecular probe. The biological toxicity of the new molecular probe was detected by pathological staining. Results The expression of NRP-1 in glioma tissues was signifi-cantly higher than that in the liver,kidney and brain(P<0.05).The 24h relaxation time ((14.19±0.87)ms) of the glioma tissue in the C group was significantly lower than that in the B group ((25.94±0.77)ms) (P<0.05) ,and the blue staining particles in the C group were more than those in the B group(P<0.05) . Conclu-sion In the animal experiment,the molecular probe with NRP-1 as the target has obvious targeting effect and good biocompatibility,which provides a clinical basis of glioma for further clinical diagnosis.
9.Risk of cardiovascular events in the use of nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs during the perioperative period: a meta-analysis
Dan YU ; Shijiang LIU ; Youli HU ; Min YU ; Cunming LIU
The Journal of Clinical Anesthesiology 2017;33(7):683-687
Objective To evaluate the risk of cardiovascular adverse events using nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs during the perioperative period.Methods A systematic review of formally published in English and Chinese literature was conducted by using computerized database on PubMed, Web of Science, Medline, Cochrane Library, CNKI and Wanfang database.The literature about controlled clinical study of nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs in perioperative use, a prospective cohort study and a retrospective review were collected.The cardiovascular risk was evaluated by the number of adverse cardiovascular events cases (myocardial infarction, angina, myocardial ischemia, arrhythmia) occurred during the period of drug use.The relevant data was extracted and their heterogeneity was tested.Results A total of 8 articles including 15 623 patients met the inclusion criteria, including 5 articles (n=13 019) on non-selective nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs, and 3 articles (n=2 604) about selective (cyclooxygenase 2) COX-2 inhibitors.Nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs used in the perioperative or a short term would reduce the risk of adverse cardiovascular events (OR=0.59, 95%CI 0.45-0.77, P=0.000 1), non-selective nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs using in the perioperative or a short term would reduce the risk of adverse cardiovascular events, the difference being statistically significant (OR=0.42, 95%CI 0.31-0.58, P<0.001).A selective COX-2 inhibitor using in the perioperative or short-term might increase cardiovascular adverse events (OR=2.53, 95%CI 1.26-5.09, P=0.009).Conclusion Non-selective nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs should be chosen for patients at high risk of adverse cardiovascular events during the perioperative period.
10.Impact of patient controlled epidural analgesia on postoperative recovery in patients undergoing laparotomy pancreatic surgeries
Siying LIU ; Zhaochu SUN ; Nan LYU ; Shijiang LIU ; Cunming LIU
The Journal of Clinical Anesthesiology 2017;33(6):554-556
Objective To compare the impact of patient controlled epidural analgesia with patient controlled intravenous analgesia on postoperative recovery and complications in patients undergoing laparotomy pancreatic surgeries.Methods Forty patients undergoing pancreatic surgeries, 27 males and 13 females, aged 18-70 years, ASA physical status Ⅰ or Ⅱ, were randomly divided into two groups (n=20 each).Patients in group E received T8-9 or T9-10 epidural block, 2% lidocaine test dose was given to ensure the location of epidural catheter, after that, each patient in group E was given 0.375% ropivacaine 5 ml into epidural space before skin incising and incision closures.Meanwhile, patients in groups E and V received propofol-sevoflurane combined intravenous inhalation anesthesia.After surgery, patients in group E received patient controlled epidural analgesia while patients in group V received patient controlled vein analgesia.Length of hospital stay, time to ambulation and exhaust defecation were recorded.Other complications were compared.Results Compared to group V, patients in group E showed earlier ambulation [(50.4±4.2) h vs (64.2±5.0) h, P<0.01], shorter hospital stays [(18.5±8.5) d vs (21.5±6.8) d, P<0.05].There was no statistically significant difference in flatus time between the two groups [(39.7±4.1) h vs (39.5±8.4) h].There was no significant difference in complications between the two groups.Conclusion The present study shows that for patients undergoing pancreatic surgeries, patient controlled epidural analgesia could effectively release post-operative pain, shorten the ambulation time and length of hospital stay with no extra complications.

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