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    Interventional pathway in the management of refractory post cholecystectomy pain (PCP) syndrome: a 6-year prospective audit in 60 patients

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    Author
    Lee, Hayun
    Kukreja, Yuvraj
    Niraj, G
    Keyword
    ACNES
    Abdominal myofascial pain syndrome
    Abdominal pain
    Post cholecystectomy syndrome
    Pulsed radiofrequency treatment
    
    Metadata
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    DOI
    10.1515/sjpain-2022-0090
    Publisher's URL
    https://www.degruyter.com/document/doi/10.1515/sjpain-2022-0090/html
    Abstract
    Objectives: Post cholecystectomy pain syndrome can affect over a third of patients undergoing laparoscopic cholecystectomy. Acute exacerbations can result in recurrent emergency admission with excessive healthcare utilization. Standard surgical management appears to focus on visceral aetiology. Abdominal myofascial pain syndrome is a poorly recognised somatic pathology that can cause refractory pain in this cohort. It develops as a result of trigger points in the abdominal musculature. The report describes the pathophysiology and a novel interventional pathway in the management of post cholecystectomy pain secondary to abdominal myofascial pain syndrome. Methods: The prospective longitudinal audit was performed at a tertiary pain medicine clinic in a university teaching hospital. Over a six-year period, adult patients with refractory abdominal pain following laparoscopic cholecystectomy were included in a structured interventional management pathway. The pathway included two interventions. Intervention I was a combination of abdominal plane blocks and epigastric port site trigger injection with steroids. Patients who failed to report durable relief (>50% pain relief at 12 weeks) were offered pulsed radiofrequency treatment to the abdominal planes (Intervention II). Outcomes included patient satisfaction, change in opioid consumption and impact on emergency visits. Results: Sixty patients who failed to respond to standard management were offered the pathway. Four patients refused due to needle phobia. Fifty-six patients received Intervention I. Failure rate was 14% (8/56). Forty-eight patients (48/56, 86%) reported significant benefit at 12 weeks while 38 patients reported durable relief at 24 weeks (38/56, 68%). Nine patients received Intervention II and all (100%) reported durable relief. Emergency admissions and opioid consumption were reduced. Conclusions: Abdominal myofascial pain syndrome is a poorly recognised cause of post cholecystectomy pain. The novel interventional management pathway could be an effective solution in patients who fail to benefit from standard management.
    Citation
    Lee, H., Kukreja, Y., & Niraj, G. (2023). Interventional pathway in the management of refractory post cholecystectomy pain (PCP) syndrome: a 6-year prospective audit in 60 patients. Scandinavian journal of pain, 10.1515/sjpain-2022-0090. Advance online publication. https://doi.org/10.1515/sjpain-2022-0090
    Type
    Article
    URI
    http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12904/17091
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    Pain

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