Dobrogowski Jan, Przeklasa-Muszyńska Anna, Wordliczek Jerzy
Zakład Badania i Leczenia Bólu Katedry Anestezjologii CM UJ, Kraków.
Folia Med Cracov. 2008;49(1-2):27-37.
Persistent post-operative pain is defined as a pain in the location of the surgery that persist for many months or even years beyond the usual course of an acute injury and is different of that suffered preoperatively. Persistent pain can be due to long lasting nociception caused by processes such as information, chronic infection or tumor. The most important causes are neuropathic pain states due to nerve compression, entrapment or other damage. Chronic pain, that is very often resistant to treatment, occurs after failed back surgery. Traumatic nerve injury during surgery results in persistent pain known as a post-surgical neuralgia. The most susceptible nerves are: intercostobrachial nerve, intervertebral nerves, ilio-hypogastric nerve, ilio-inguinal nerve, genito-femoral nerve and femoral and sciatic nerve. It means that after some, also elective, surgeries, e.g. mastectomy, thoracotomy, herniotomy, limb amputations, chelecystomy, hysterectomy and nephrectomy, persistent postoperative pain is more common than after other operations. Persistent pain can occur even in 60% patients after limb amputation, in 30% after breast tumor excicion or mastectomy, in 40% after thoracotomy and in 10-30% after hernia repair, but severe pain (NRS>5) lasting even for many years is observed in 5-10% after limb and breast amputation, thoracotomy and Post-CABG operations and in 2-4% patients after hernia repair. Modern approaches including satisfactory perioperative analgesia, nerve sparing, minimally invasive techniques, and the use of a surgical approach that minimizes tissue trauma are crucial. Following inguinal hernia repair, chronic pain is less common than after laparoscopic and mesh repairs. The prompt diagnosis of acute neuropathic pain after operation is very important and management is based on extrapolation of data from the chronic neuropathic pain setting.
术后持续性疼痛定义为手术部位的疼痛,在急性损伤的正常病程之后持续数月甚至数年,且与术前疼痛不同。持续性疼痛可能是由诸如炎症、慢性感染或肿瘤等过程引起的长期伤害性感受所致。最重要的原因是由于神经受压、卡压或其他损伤导致的神经性疼痛状态。慢性疼痛在腰椎手术失败后发生,且常常对治疗有抵抗性。手术期间的创伤性神经损伤会导致称为术后神经痛的持续性疼痛。最易受影响的神经有:肋间臂神经、椎间神经、髂腹下神经、髂腹股沟神经、生殖股神经以及股神经和坐骨神经。这意味着在一些手术(包括择期手术)后,如乳房切除术、开胸手术、疝修补术、肢体截肢术、胆囊切除术、子宫切除术和肾切除术,术后持续性疼痛比其他手术更为常见。肢体截肢术后甚至60%的患者会出现持续性疼痛,乳腺肿瘤切除或乳房切除术后为30%,开胸手术后为40%,疝修补术后为10 - 30%,但肢体和乳房截肢、开胸手术及冠状动脉搭桥术后5 - 10%的患者以及疝修补术后2 - 4%的患者会出现持续数年的严重疼痛(数字评分量表>5)。包括令人满意的围手术期镇痛、保留神经、微创技术以及采用使组织创伤最小化的手术方法在内的现代方法至关重要。腹股沟疝修补术后,慢性疼痛比腹腔镜和补片修补术后少见。术后急性神经性疼痛的及时诊断非常重要,其管理基于从慢性神经性疼痛情况推断的数据。