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与仅患其中一种疾病的患者相比,使用麻醉剂的糖尿病患者不太可能获得良好的肠道准备效果。

Diabetics on Narcotics Are Less Likely to Achieve Excellent Bowel Preparation Than Are Patients with Either Condition.

作者信息

Madhoun Mohammad F, Bitar Hussein, Bhatti Owais, Zia Hassaan, Parava Pratyusha, Bashir Muhammad H

机构信息

Veterans Affairs Medical Center, Oklahoma City, OK, USA.

Deapartment of Internal Medicine, Digestive Diseases and Nutrition, University of Oklahoma Health Sciences Center, 800 Stanton L. Young Blvd., Oklahoma City, OK, 73104, USA.

出版信息

Dig Dis Sci. 2017 Mar;62(3):723-729. doi: 10.1007/s10620-016-4417-6. Epub 2016 Dec 29.

Abstract

BACKGROUND

Diabetes and chronic narcotic use negatively affect the quality of bowel preparation before colonoscopy.

AIM

To investigate whether narcotic use and diabetes have an additive negative impact on bowel preparation.

PATIENTS AND METHODS

We performed a retrospective study of 2841 patients (mean age 61 ± 10.2; 94% male) who received outpatient colonoscopies at our Veterans Affairs Medical Center between June 2012 and December 2014. We collected information related to demographics, body mass index, indications, and medical/surgical history (diabetes mellitus, stroke, cirrhosis, dementia, constipation, hypothyroidism, and use of narcotics or antidepressants/anxiolytics for more than three months). Patients were classified into four groups: (1) diabetics on narcotics, (2) diabetics only, (3) on narcotics only, and (4) neither diabetic nor using narcotics. Quality of the bowel preparation was scored using the Boston Bowel Preparation Scale (BBPS) and categorized as either excellent (BBPS ≥7, with no individual segment scoring <2) or not excellent (BBPS <7). Multivariate logistic regression analysis was performed to identify the combined impact of narcotic use and diabetes on bowel preparation.

RESULTS

Bowel preparation quality was excellent in 49%. Thirty-eight percent of patients with diabetes who were using narcotics (adjusted OR 0.6, CI [0.4, 0.8]) achieved excellent bowel preparation compared with 44% (adjusted OR 0.7, CI [0.6, 0.9]) of patients on narcotics only, 48% (adjusted OR 0.8, CI [0.7, 0.9]) of diabetics only, and 54% of patients with neither condition.

CONCLUSION

Concomitant narcotic use and diabetes have a compounding effect on the quality of bowel preparation prior to colonoscopy.

摘要

背景

糖尿病和长期使用麻醉药品会对结肠镜检查前的肠道准备质量产生负面影响。

目的

研究麻醉药品使用和糖尿病是否对肠道准备有叠加的负面影响。

患者与方法

我们对2012年6月至2014年12月期间在我们退伍军人事务医疗中心接受门诊结肠镜检查的2841例患者(平均年龄61±10.2岁;94%为男性)进行了一项回顾性研究。我们收集了与人口统计学、体重指数、适应证以及内科/外科病史(糖尿病、中风、肝硬化、痴呆、便秘、甲状腺功能减退以及使用麻醉药品或抗抑郁药/抗焦虑药超过三个月)相关的信息。患者被分为四组:(1)使用麻醉药品的糖尿病患者,(2)仅患有糖尿病的患者,(3)仅使用麻醉药品的患者,(4)既无糖尿病也未使用麻醉药品的患者。使用波士顿肠道准备量表(BBPS)对肠道准备质量进行评分,并分为优秀(BBPS≥7,且单个节段评分均<2)或不优秀(BBPS<7)。进行多因素逻辑回归分析以确定麻醉药品使用和糖尿病对肠道准备的综合影响。

结果

49%的患者肠道准备质量优秀。使用麻醉药品的糖尿病患者中38%(调整后比值比0.6,可信区间[0.4, 0.8])实现了优秀的肠道准备,仅使用麻醉药品的患者为44%(调整后比值比0.7,可信区间[0.6, 0.9]),仅患有糖尿病的患者为48%(调整后比值比0.8,可信区间[0.7, 0.9]),两种情况均无的患者为54%。

结论

同时使用麻醉药品和患有糖尿病对结肠镜检查前的肠道准备质量有复合影响。

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