| Literature DB >> 28238936 |
Sébastien Pierre1, Caroline Rivera2, Béatrice Le Maître3, Anne-Marie Ruppert4, Hervé Bouaziz5, Nathalie Wirth6, Jacques Saboye7, Alain Sautet8, Alain Charles Masquelet9, Jean-Jacques Tournier10, Yves Martinet11, Benoît Chaput12, Bertrand Dureuil13.
Abstract
Smoking is a public health problem of particular importance during the perioperative period, since it exposes patients scheduled for surgery to risk increases of 20% in hospital mortality and 40% in major postoperative complications. In addition, current smoking increases almost all specific surgical complications. The perioperative period offers a genuine opportunity for smoking cessation. The rate of preoperative smoking cessation can be increased significantly by offering behavior management and the prescription of a nicotine substitute before any scheduled surgical intervention. Preoperative smoking cessation should be routinely recommended independently of the timing of the intervention, even though the benefits increase in proportion with the length of cessation. All professionals of the care pathway (general practitioners, surgeons, anesthetists-intensivists, caregivers) must inform smokers of the positive effects of smoking cessation and offer them dedicated management and personalized follow-up. In children, cessation of parental smoking or removal of the child from environmental tobacco smoke as long before surgery as possible is indispensable.Entities:
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Year: 2017 PMID: 28238936 DOI: 10.1016/j.accpm.2017.02.002
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Anaesth Crit Care Pain Med ISSN: 2352-5568 Impact factor: 4.132