| Literature DB >> 33471209 |
Abstract
Chronic postoperative pain has been identified as a major medical and socioeconomic problem. A prevention of the chronification processes is potentially possible and preventive treatment could start early (e.g. preoperatively). So far, however, evidence for the effectiveness of preventive strategies is basically low. Important reasons for this dilemma are the lack of appropriate risk assessment as well as effective and mechanism-based preventive (procedure-sepcific) strategies for the chronification process, a lack of stratification of treatment approaches and a so far barely investigated combination of various treatment approaches. In this review article recent findings on the appropriate identification of patients at risk for developing postoperative chronic pain are presented, predictive models for the valid estimation of the individual risk of patients are assessed and studies on pharmaceutical and regional analgesia techniques influencing the pain chronification process are discussed. As a chronification process is, however, extremely complex and dynamic and also necessitates adaptation of the prevention during the course of the process, only combinations of treatment, interdisciplinary and if necessary even longer term approaches might be successful. Future studies are needed to address with which preventive treatment strategies and in which patients chronic pain after surgery can effectively be prevented.Entities:
Keywords: Analgesia, preventive; Combined modality therapy; Models, biopsychosocial; Pain chronification; Risk stratification
Year: 2021 PMID: 33471209 DOI: 10.1007/s00482-020-00525-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Schmerz ISSN: 0932-433X Impact factor: 1.107