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1.
J Pers Med ; 14(6)2024 Jun 01.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38929815

RESUMEN

Surgical resection is the key treatment for colorectal cancer, but the extent of surgical trauma has been implied as a key factor for the oncologic outcome. The immune stress response to surgical trauma generates a cascade of immunological events implying neutrophils' perioperative change generating NETosis, N killer decrease, and platelets' activation that may influence postoperative surgical outcome, tumor cell growth, and future oncogenesis. The present study aimed to investigate the correlation between intraoperative oxygen consumption (VO2) and the dynamic variation of neutrophils, lymphocytes, and platelets in the perioperative period to identify an intraoperative tool that could predict the postoperative immune response. Twenty-six colorectal oncological surgical patients were enrolled in an observational, prospective, monocentric study, over 18 months. Serum neutrophils, lymphocytes, and thrombocytes values were collected in the preoperative period and on the third postoperative day, oxygen consumption was measured and recorded every 15 min during surgery using indirect calorimetry. We compared oxygen consumption measurements registered 30 min after induction of anesthesia (VO2a) and the first value registered after abdominal wall closure (VO2b) to perioperative variation of absolute neutrophils (VNC), lymphocytes (VLC), and platelets (VPC) count. Our results proved a significant correlation between VO2 variation and neutrophils' perioperative dynamic assessed by VNC (correlation coefficient = 0.547, p < 0.01, 95% confidence interval (CI) =0.175, 0.783). We also noticed a correlation between VPC and VO2 (correlation coefficient = -0.603, p < 0.01, 95% CI = -0.815, -0.248). No correlation could be shown between VO2 and VLC variation (p = 0.39). In conclusion, intraoperative VO2 variation measured by indirect calorimetry correlates well with perioperative neutrophils and platelets count dynamic variations and can be used as an early prognosis marker of postoperative immune response and surgical outcome in colorectal oncological surgery.

2.
J Clin Med ; 13(10)2024 May 20.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38792558

RESUMEN

The human physiological response "to stress" includes all metabolic and hormonal changes produced by a traumatic event at the micro or macro cellular levels. The main goal of the body's first response to trauma is to keep physiological homeostasis. The perioperative non-specific adaptation response can sometimes be detrimental and can produce systemic inflammatory response syndrome (SIRS), characterized by hypermetabolism and hyper catabolism. We performed a narrative review consisting of a description of the surgical stress response's categories of changes (neurohormonal and immunological response) followed by reviewing methods found in published studies to modulate the surgical stress response perioperatively. We described various preoperative measures cited in the literature as lowering the burden of surgical trauma. This article revises the anesthetic drugs and techniques that have an impact on the surgical stress response and proven immune-modulatory effects. We also tried to name present knowledge gaps requiring future research. Our review concludes that proper preoperative measures, adequate general anesthetics, multimodal analgesia, early postoperative mobilization, and early enteral nutrition can decrease the stress response to surgery and ease patient recovery. Anesthetics and analgesics used during the perioperative period may modulate the innate and adaptive immune system and inflammatory system, with a consecutive impact on cancer recurrence and long-term outcomes.

3.
Cureus ; 16(3): e56822, 2024 Mar.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38654802

RESUMEN

BACKGROUND: Surgical stress response in colorectal surgery consists of a neurohormonal and an immunological response and influences oncological outcomes. The intensity of surgical trauma influences mortality, morbidity, and metastasis' occurrence in colorectal neoplasia. Energy expenditure (EE) stands for the body's energy consumed to keep its homeostasis and can be either calculated or measured by direct or indirect calorimetry. AIM: The present study attempted to evaluate surgical stress response using EE measurement and compare it to the postoperative cortisol dynamic. METHODS: A prospective, monocentric study was conducted over a period of one year in the Anesthesiology Department including 21 patients from whom serum cortisol values were collected in the preoperative period and on the first postoperative day, and EE was measured and recorded every 15 minutes throughout surgery using the indirect calorimetry method. The study compared EE values' dynamic registered 30 minutes after intubation and 30 minutes before extubating (after abdominal closure) to cortisol perioperative dynamic. RESULTS: We enrolled 21 patients and 84 measurements were recorded, 42 probes of serum cortisol and 42 measurements of EE. The mean value of the first measurement of serum cortisol was 13.60±3.6 µg and the second was 16.21±6.52 µg. The average value of the first EE recording was 1273.9±278 kcal and 1463.4±398.2 kcal of the second recording. The bivariate analysis performed showed a good correlation between cortisol variation and EE's variation (Spearman coefficient=0.666, p<0.001, CI=0.285, 0.865). In nine cases (42.85%), cortisol value at 24 hours reached the baseline or below the baselines preoperative value. In eight cases (38.09%), patients' EE at the end of the surgery was lower than that recorded at the beginning of the surgery. CONCLUSIONS: Intraoperative EE variation correlated well with cortisol perioperative dynamic and stood out in this study as a valuable and accessible predictor of surgical stress in colorectal surgery.

4.
J Clin Med ; 12(21)2023 Oct 26.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37959235

RESUMEN

Pain is a complex entity with deleterious effects on the entire organism. Poorly controlled postoperative pain impacts the patient outcome, being associated with increased morbidity, inadequate quality of life and functional recovery. In the current surgical environment with less invasive surgical procedures increasingly being used and a trend towards rapid discharge home after surgery, we need to continuously re-evaluate analgesic strategies. We have performed a narrative review consisting of a description of the acute surgical pain anatomic pathways and the connection between pain and the surgical stress response followed by reviewing methods of multimodal analgesia in colorectal surgery found in recent literature data. We have described various regional analgesia techniques and drugs effective in pain treatment, emphasizing their advantages and concerns. We have also tried to identify present knowledge gaps requiring future research. Our review concludes that surgical pain has peculiarities that make its management complex, implying a consistent, multimodal approach aiming to block both peripheral and central pain pathways.

5.
Cells ; 11(12)2022 06 09.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35741011

RESUMEN

Worldwide, the prevalence of surgery under general anesthesia has significantly increased, both because of modern anesthetic and pain-control techniques and because of better diagnosis and the increased complexity of surgical techniques. Apart from developing new concepts in the surgical field, researchers and clinicians are now working on minimizing the impact of surgical trauma and offering minimal invasive procedures due to the recent discoveries in the field of cellular and molecular mechanisms that have revealed a systemic inflammatory and pro-oxidative impact not only in the perioperative period but also in the long term, contributing to more difficult recovery, increased morbidity and mortality, and a negative financial impact. Detailed molecular and cellular analysis has shown an overproduction of inflammatory and pro-oxidative species, responsible for augmenting the systemic inflammatory status and making postoperative recovery more difficult. Moreover, there are a series of changes in certain epigenetic structures, the most important being the microRNAs. This review describes the most important molecular and cellular mechanisms that impact the surgical patient undergoing general anesthesia, and it presents a series of antioxidant therapies that can reduce systemic inflammation.


Asunto(s)
Anestesia General , Antioxidantes , Anestesia General/efectos adversos , Antioxidantes/metabolismo , Antioxidantes/farmacología , Antioxidantes/uso terapéutico , Epigénesis Genética , Humanos , Inflamación , Oxidación-Reducción
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