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July 14, 2023

Tips for Keeping Laparoscopic Patients Comfortable

Despite its minimalist approach and more rapid healing, laparoscopic surgery still imparts varying degrees of difficult post-op pain for patients. Here are tips for managing patients' pain throughout their procedures so that they'll be more comfortable post-op.

Get to the root
The source of post-operative pain is generally due to one of these factors:

Although the bowels don't respond to manipulation with 'sharp' pain symptoms, other internal organs (such as the spermatic cord, ovaries and fallopian tubes) will demonstrate significant pain in response to surgical insult. But you can effectively limit post-operative pain in laparoscopic surgery with the techniques routinely applied to any type of surgery.

These include the judicious use of intraoperative local anesthesia (preferably early rather than later in the operation) by the surgeon to block pain at the source. There is also the option of administering narcotics to the patient (either from the anesthesiologist during the surgery or the PACU nurse in the recovery room). Most anesthesia providers have gotten away from the use of narcotics in outpatients altogether, minimizing respiratory depression and post-op nausea, and facilitating a faster recovery room throughput. Further, the small wounds heal more quickly and are more treatable with less powerful types of painkillers.

But residual CO2 is more difficult to deal with. Usually, the gas is absorbed into the bloodstream and exhaled through the lungs over the first 24 hours to 48 hours post-op. But when CO2 settles under the diaphragm, it can lead to several days - and, in some cases, up to several weeks - of post-operative referred shoulder pain. As this is exclusively a side effect of laparoscopy, that's what I'll focus on here.

Tailor the techniques
Your surgeon can begin tackling post-op patient comfort with his intraoperative actions.

Assess the anesthesia
Two suggestions here for tweaking your practice to enhance patient comfort.

Pointers for post-op
Once the patient is in post-op, it's exercise time. Encourage patients who do experience post-op shoulder pain from intra-op insufflated gas to assume the lateral fetal position. Experienced PACU nurses will cite this maneuver as the most effective in mitigating this unusual type of pain.

Finally, you can employ your typical post-op protocols of painkillers and PONV drugs to minimize post-op nausea. Remember, because pain and nausea are often intertwined in surgical patients (and pneumoperitoneum can itself contribute to post-op nausea), a little pain control will go a long way toward a comfortable recovering patient. Our goal as physicians and scientists should be to keep working on refined techniques and improved drugs to provide for smoother, faster recovery-area stays and less painful post-op courses for our patients.

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