Prevention of respiratory complications after abdominal surgery: a randomised clinical trial
Autor: | Jane L. Hall, J. Tapper, R. Tarala, John C. Hall |
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Jazyk: | angličtina |
Rok vydání: | 1996 |
Předmět: |
Spirometry
Adult Male medicine.medical_specialty Letter Breathing Exercises law.invention Postoperative Complications Randomized controlled trial law Risk Factors Abdomen medicine Humans Physical Therapy Modalities General Environmental Science Aged medicine.diagnostic_test business.industry General Engineering General Medicine Middle Aged Respiration Disorders Confidence interval Clinical trial Regimen medicine.anatomical_structure Physical therapy General Earth and Planetary Sciences Sputum Female medicine.symptom business Abdominal surgery Research Article |
Popis: | Objective To evaluate the prevention of respiratory complications after abdominal surgery by a comparison of a global policy of incentive spirometry with a regimen consisting of deep breathing exercises for low risk patients and incentive spirometry plus physiotherapy for high risk patients. Design Stratified randomised trial. Setting General surgical service of an urban teaching hospital. Patients 456 patients undergoing abdominal surgery. Patients less than 60 years of age with an American Society of Anesthesia classification of 1 were considered to be at low risk. Outcome measures Respiratory complications were defined as clinical features consistent with collapse or consolidation, a temperature above 38 degrees C, plus either confirmatory chest radiology or positive results on sputum microbiology. We also recorded the time that staff devoted to prophylactic respiratory therapy. Results There was good baseline equivalence between the groups. The incidence of respiratory complications was 15% (35/231) for patients in the incentive spirometry group and 12% (28/225) for patients in the mixed therapy group (P = 0.40; 95% confidence interval -3.6% to 9.0%). It required similar amounts of staff time to provide incentive spirometry and deep breathing exercises for low risk patients. The inclusion of physiotherapy for high risk patients, however, resulted in the utilisation of an extra 30 minutes of staff time per patient. Conclusions When the use of resources is taken into account, the most efficient regimen of prophylaxis against respiratory complications after abdominal surgery is deep breathing exercises for low risk patients and incentive spirometry for high risk patients. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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