| Literature DB >> 27588111 |
Hideo Shigeishi1, Kouji Ohta1, Shinichi Fujimoto1, Takayuki Nakagawa1, Kuniko Mizuta1, Shigehiro Ono1, Hiroshi Shimasue1, Yoshiaki Ninomiya1, Koichiro Higashikawa1, Misato Tada1, Fumi Ishida1, Gaku Okui1, Toshiya Okumura1, Akiko Fukui1, Kazumi Kubozono1, Kazuhiro Yamamoto1, Yoko Ishida1, Sayaka Seino1, Miho Hashikata1, Kazuki Sasaki1, Takako Naruse1, Mohammad Zeshaan Rahman1, Ryo Uetsuki1, Akiko Nimiya1, Megumi Takamoto2, Kana Dainobu2, Tomoko Tokikazu2, Hiromi Nishi3, Masaru Sugiyama4, Masaaki Takechi1.
Abstract
The records of 70 patients with oral cancer who were treated at a single institution between 2008 and 2014 were reviewed. The body temperature, white blood cell count, and C-reactive protein (CRP) levels were compared between those who had received preoperative oral care (oral care group) and those who had not received any (non-oral care group). When the patients were divided into those who underwent minimally invasive surgery and those who underwent severely invasive surgery, the mean CRP level in the early postoperative period was lower in the oral care group as compared with the non-oral care group in those who underwent minimally invasive surgery as well as those who underwent severely invasive surgery. However, the mean CRP level was most evidently reduced in the severely invasive group on days 1 and 3-5. However, no significant differences were observed with regard to the percentage of postoperative infectious complications (for example, surgical site infection, anastomotic leak and pneumonia) between the oral care (13.6%) and non-oral care (20.8%) groups, though a reduced prevalence of postoperative complications following preoperative oral care was noted. The results of the present study suggest that preoperative oral care can decrease inflammation during the early postoperative stage in patients with oral cancer who undergo severely invasive surgery.Entities:
Keywords: oral cancer; oral health care; retrospective study
Year: 2016 PMID: 27588111 PMCID: PMC4998107 DOI: 10.3892/etm.2016.3532
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Exp Ther Med ISSN: 1792-0981 Impact factor: 2.447