Functional Implications of Long-term Pain Following Outpatient Inguinal Herniorrhaphy--a Prospective Evaluation
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Background: The purpose of the present study is to assess pain and functional outcomes at 1 y following inguinal herniorrhaphy in which patients were randomized to receive a continuous wound infusion of bupivacaine to receiving a saline infusion.
Methods: Patients received saline or bupivacaine prior to incision and then for 60 h postoperatively. The incidence, severity, and functional interference of pain were assessed for five postoperative days, and at 1 y.
Results: Seventy patients completed a survey 1 y following herniorrhaphy. Four percent (3/72) of patients were in moderate to severe pain "almost always" or "often". Twenty-one percent (15/72) of patients experienced pain with ambulation. There was no difference between groups at 1 y.
Conclusions: The incidence of moderate or severe pain is concerning 1 y following surgery. Functional aberrations associated with pain should be assessed in all studies evaluating long-term pain after herniorrhaphy.
Health information: what can mobile phone assessments add?.
Warren Stomberg M, Platon B, Widen A, Wallner I, Karlsson O Perspect Health Inf Manag. 2012; 9:1-10.
PMID: 23209453 PMC: 3510647.