• Medicine · Jul 2016

    Observational Study

    Prospective clinical observational study evaluating gender-associated differences of preoperative pain intensity.

    • Sascha Tafelski, Léonie F Kerper, Anna-Lena Salz, Claudia Spies, Eva Reuter, Irit Nachtigall, Michael Schäfer, Alexander Krannich, and Henning Krampe.
    • aDepartment of Anesthesiology and Intensive Care Medicine, Campus Charité Mitte and Campus Virchow-Klinikum, Charité-Universitaetsmedizin Berlin bDepartment of Anaesthesiology, Intensive Care, Emergency and Pain Medicine, Hospital Wolfenbuettel gGmbH, Wolfenbuettel cDepartment of Anaesthesiology, Intensive Care and Pain Medicine, Hospital Waldfriede, Berlin dDepartment of Biostatistics, Clinical Research Unit, Berlin Institute of Health, Charité- Universitaetsmedizin Berlin, Germany.
    • Medicine (Baltimore). 2016 Jul 1; 95 (27): e4077.

    AbstractPrevious studies reported conflicting results concerning different pain perceptions of men and women. Recent research found higher pain levels in men after major surgery, contrasted by women after minor procedures. This trial investigates differences in self-reported preoperative pain intensity between genders before surgery.Patients were enrolled in 2011 and 2012 presenting for preoperative evaluation at the anesthesiological assessment clinic at Charité University hospital. Out of 5102 patients completing a computer-assisted self-assessment, 3042 surgical patients with any preoperative pain were included into this prospective observational clinical study. Preoperative pain intensity (0-100 VAS, visual analog scale) was evaluated integrating psychological cofactors into analysis.Women reported higher preoperative pain intensity than men with median VAS scores of 30 (25th-75th percentiles: 10-52) versus 21 (10-46) (P < 0.001). Adjusted multiple regression analysis showed that female gender remained statistically significantly associated with higher pain intensity (P < 0.001). Gender differences were consistent across several subgroups especially with varying patterns in elderly. Women scheduled for minor and moderate surgical procedures showed largest differences in overall pain compared to men.This large clinical study observed significantly higher preoperative pain intensity in female surgical patients. This gender difference was larger in the elderly potentially contradicting the current hypothesis of a primary sex-hormone derived effect. The observed variability in specific patient subgroups may help to explain heterogeneous findings of previous studies.

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