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      Multimodal approach to control postoperative pathophysiology and rehabilitation.

      1
      British journal of anaesthesia
      Oxford University Press (OUP)

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          Abstract

          Major surgery is still associated with undesirable sequelae such as pain, cardiopulmonary, infective and thromboembolic complications, cerebral dysfunction, nausea and gastrointestinal paralysis, fatigue and prolonged convalescence. The key pathogenic factor in postoperative morbidity, excluding failures of surgical and anaesthetic technique, is the surgical stress response with subsequent increased demands on organ function. These changes in organ function are thought to be mediated by trauma-induced endocrine metabolic changes and activation of several biological cascade systems (cytokines, complement, arachidonic acid metabolites, nitric oxide, free oxygen radicals, etc). To understand postoperative morbidity it is therefore necessary to understand the pathophysiological role of the various components of the surgical stress response and to determine if modification of such responses may improve surgical outcome. While no single technique or drug regimen has been shown to eliminate postoperative morbidity and mortality, multimodal interventions may lead to a major reduction in the undesirable sequelae of surgical injury with improved recovery and reduction in postoperative morbidity and overall costs.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          Br J Anaesth
          British journal of anaesthesia
          Oxford University Press (OUP)
          0007-0912
          0007-0912
          May 1997
          : 78
          : 5
          Affiliations
          [1 ] Department of Surgical Gastroenterology, Hvidovre University Hospital, Denmark.
          Article
          S0007-0912(17)39989-0
          10.1093/bja/78.5.606
          9175983
          24fa2662-b026-4130-9795-f4b1b452bf3a
          History

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