View clinical trials related to Gastrointestinal Surgery.
Filter by:Objective To evaluate the effect of patient-controlled intravenous analgesia combined with different opioid receptors for gastrointestinal surgery. Methods A total of 4342 patients who underwent gastrointestinal postoperative analgesia in the first affiliated Hospital of Air Force military Medical University from May 2018 to March 2022 were collected retrospectively. The patient-controlled intravenous analgesia regimen in this study was composed of different opioid receptor drugs:sufentanil combined with nalbuphine group (SN group) and Hydromorphone combined with nalbuphine group (HN group) and single opioid receptor group: sufentanil group (S group). SN group ,HN group and S group were treated with sufentanil 100 μ g + nalbuphine 40 mg, hydromorphone 10 mg+ nalbuphine 40 mg, sufentanil 200 μ g, diluted to 100 ml, background dose 1 ml/h, PCA dose 0.5 ml, locking time 10 min. The demographic data of the three groups were collected, the number of patients with insufficient static and dynamic analgesia (VAS ≥ 4) at 24 and 48 hours after operation, the adverse reactions at 24 and 48 hours after operation, the first exhaust time and the first ambulation time were collected, evaluate the analgesic effect of combination of different opioid receptor drugs and single opioid receptor drugs in PCIA after gastrointestinal surgery.
For non-diabetic patients undergoing gastrointestinal surgery, preoperative oral carbohydrate improves postoperative recovery. The purpose of this pilot study is to investigate the impact of preoperative oral carbohydrate (outfast®) on the recovery in diabetic patients after gastrointestinal surgery.
It is a prospective, randomized, placebo-controlled study to investigate the effect of TEA with different block level on propofol concentration during general anesthesia induction.
The study was designed to test the hypothesis that immunonutrition and enteral nutrition would reduce the incidence of infectious complications in a population of malnourished patients following elective upper GI surgery