Islamabad, Dec 26 : Are children suffering needlessly
after surgery? UC Irvine anesthesiologists who specialize in pediatric care
believe so.
An operation can be one of the most traumatic events children
face, and according to a UCI study, many of them experience unnecessary
postsurgical pain lasting weeks or months.
Such chronic pain is well
understood and treated in adults but has been generally overlooked in pediatric
patients, said Dr. Zeev Kain, professor and chair of anesthesiology &
perioperative care.
This month, he and his UCI colleagues published in
the Journal of Pediatric Surgery the first-ever study of chronic postoperative
pain in children. Out of 113 youngsters who had procedures ranging from
appendectomies to orthopedic surgery, 13 percent reported pain that lingered for
months.
While the sample group was small, Kain said, the study's
implications are profound. Four million children undergo surgical procedures in
the U.S. each year, suggesting that more than half a million of them suffer well
after leaving the hospital. This results in more school absences and visits to
the doctor and, for parents, days off work.
Kain said the research
indicates that physicians need to more effectively manage pain within 48 hours
of surgery -- which, in adults, has been shown to minimize the potential for
chronic pain -- and that parents should be properly prepared to alleviate their
child's pain at home.
"Medical professionals must understand this issue
better and learn how to work with parents to care for chronic pain," he said.
"We hope this study marks a first step toward long-term, definitive
solutions."
Ends
SA/EN
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Children suffer unnecessarily from chronic postoperative pain
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