Postoperative pain trajectories in cardiac surgery patients

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Abstract

Poorly controlled postoperative pain is a longstanding and costly problem in medicine. The purposes of this study were to characterize the acute pain trajectories over the first four postoperative days in 83 cardiac surgery patients with a mixed effects model of linear growth to determine whether statistically significant individual differences exist in these pain trajectories, and to compare the quality of measurement by trajectory with conventional pain measurement practices. The data conformed to a linear model that provided slope (rate of change) as a basis for comparing patients. Slopes varied significantly across patients, indicating that the direction and rate of change in pain during the first four days of recovery from surgery differed systematically across individuals. Of the 83 patients, 24 had decreasing pain after surgery, 24 had increasing pain, and the remaining 35 had approximately constant levels of pain over the four postoperative days. © 2012 C. Richard Chapman et al.

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Chapman, C. R., Zaslansky, R., Donaldson, G. W., & Shinfeld, A. (2012). Postoperative pain trajectories in cardiac surgery patients. Pain Research and Treatment, 2012. https://doi.org/10.1155/2012/608359

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