Current opinion in anaesthesiology
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Curr Opin Anaesthesiol · Jun 2006
ReviewPostcesarean analgesia: effective strategies and association with chronic pain.
The management of postoperative pain after cesarean section slightly differs from that of the general surgical population, specifically women need to recover quickly to take care of their newborn baby. Optimal pain management is imperative for the success of immediate-term and long-term rehabilitation and this principle applies to obstetric patients. There is growing evidence that perioperative pain management has consequences extending well beyond the immediate recovery period. Unrelieved postoperative pain is a striking risk factor for the development of residual pain. ⋯ The use of balanced analgesia has significantly improved acute pain management after cesarean section. Future studies should extend their investigations beyond the first 48 h and consider the long-term effects of different analgesic regimens, that is, those that alter the development of residual pain.
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With the graying of the Western population, there is a continuous increase in the proportion of elderly patients undergoing surgical procedures. Geriatric anesthesia is emerging from a 'subspecialty' to the mainstream of today's anesthesia and perioperative care. Much has been written on anesthesia for the elderly, but this review will concentrate on selected topics related to elderly care that represent current unresolved and pertinent issues for the care of the elderly surgical patient. ⋯ Although age is a clear risk factor for postoperative cognitive dysfunction, the association of general anesthesia with cognitive dysfunction is less clear, as is the effect of anesthesia per se or surgery on long-term cognitive dysfunction. Cardiac diastolic dysfunction is a relatively new and evolving concept in anesthesia and perioperative medicine, yet clearly diastolic dysfunction even with a normal ejection fraction may have a significant effect on the perioperative outcome and management of elderly patients. Small, but powerful studies have shown significant outcome benefit with prophylactic perioperative beta-blockade in high-risk patients undergoing major noncardiac surgery. Data from other studies, however, are still conflicting and the final verdict awaits larger scale outcome studies.