Lluís G Aguilera, Lluís Gallart, Isabel Ramos, Xavier Duran, Fernando Escolano
Minerva anestesiologica 2023 DecLaparotomy is assumed to decrease cough strength due to three factors: abdominal muscle trauma, postoperative pain, and diaphragmatic dysfunction. However, the effect of trauma from laparotomy itself on strength (net of the other two factors) has not been measured to our knowledge. The aim of this study was to measure the effect of laparotomy on cough strength after first measuring the effect of epidural analgesia. In 11 patients scheduled for open midline laparotomy, cough pressure (PCOUGH), a proxy for strength, was measured with a rectal balloon at three moments: before the procedure, at baseline; before surgery, under epidural bupivacaine to T6; and postoperatively, under epidural bupivacaine to the same analgesic level (T6). Continuous variables were compared using the Wilcoxon signed-rank test. The repeatability of PCOUGH measurements was confirmed with the intraclass correlation coefficient (ICC). Pain on coughing, hand grip strength, and the Ramsay and modified Bromage scores were also recorded. Median (interquartile range) PCOUGH decreased from a baseline of 103 (89-137) to 71 (56-116) cmH
Lluís G Aguilera, Lluís Gallart, Isabel Ramos, Xavier Duran, Fernando Escolano. Effects of midline laparotomy on cough strength: a prospective study measuring cough pressure. Minerva anestesiologica. 2023 Dec;89(12):1092-1098
PMID: 38019173
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