Manipulation of the Metabolic Response in Clinical Practice

被引:0
|
作者
Henrik Kehlet
机构
[1] Department of Surgical Gastroenterology 435,
[2] Hvidovre University Hospital,undefined
[3] DK-2650 Hvidovre,undefined
[4] Denmark,undefined
来源
World Journal of Surgery | 2000年 / 24卷
关键词
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Surgical injury is followed by profound changes in endocrine metabolic function and various host defense mechanisms leading to catabolism, immunosuppression, ileus, impaired pulmonary function, and hypoxemia. These physiologic changes are supposed to be involved in the pathogenesis of postoperative morbidity. Effective afferent neural blockade with continuous epidural local anesthetic techniques inhibits a major part of the endocrine metabolic response, leading to improved protein economy but without important effects on inflammatory or immunologic responses. In contrast, pain treatment with other modalities such as nonsteroidal antiinflammatory drugs (NSAIDs) and opioids has only a small inhibitory effect on endocrine metabolic responses. Preoperative high-dose glucocorticoid therapy provides additional pain relief and improves pulmonary function, but it reduces the inflammatory response (acute-phase proteins, cytokines, hyperthermia) and immune function. Minimally invasive surgery leaves the endocrine metabolic responses largely unaltered but reduces the inflammatory response and immune suppression. Thus several techniques are available to modify the stress responses in elective surgery patients. The effect of these techniques to alter endocrine metabolic and inflammatory responses during severe surgical illness has not been established. Neural blockade and minimally invasive surgery have improved outcome following elective surgery, especially when integrated into a multimodal postoperative rehabilitation program. Application of this knowledge from pathophysiologic responses to uncomplicated surgical injury should be explored in patients with severe surgical illness.
引用
收藏
页码:690 / 695
页数:5
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Manipulation of the metabolic response in clinical practice
    Kehlet, H
    WORLD JOURNAL OF SURGERY, 2000, 24 (06) : 690 - 695
  • [2] Metabolic syndrome in clinical practice Response
    Fisman, Enrique Z.
    Tenenbaum, Alexander
    CARDIOLOGY JOURNAL, 2014, 21 (02) : 210 - 210
  • [3] Manipulation of enteric flora in clinical practice
    Kamm, MA
    Inflammatory Bowel Disease: Translation From Basic Research to Clinical Practice, 2005, 140 : 66 - 72
  • [4] Metabolic syndrome in clinical practice
    Katsiki, Niki
    Athyros, Vasilios G.
    Karagiannis, Asterios
    CARDIOLOGY JOURNAL, 2014, 21 (02) : 209 - 209
  • [5] Using Metabolic Equivalents in Clinical Practice
    Franklin, Barry A.
    Brinks, Jenna
    Berra, Kathy
    Lavie, Carl J.
    Gordon, Neil F.
    Sperling, Laurence S.
    AMERICAN JOURNAL OF CARDIOLOGY, 2018, 121 (03): : 382 - 387
  • [6] Metabolic manipulation of hypoxia and radiotherapy response by electron transport inhibitors
    Gandolfo, Maria Jose
    Kyle, Alastair H.
    Minchinton, Andrew I.
    CANCER RESEARCH, 2014, 74 (19)
  • [7] Clinical practice guidelines Response
    Vachhrajani, Shobhan
    Kulkarni, Abhaya V.
    Kestle, John R. W.
    JOURNAL OF NEUROSURGERY-PEDIATRICS, 2009, 3 (04) : 248 - 248
  • [8] CLINICAL PRACTICE GUIDELINES response
    Bidra, Avinash
    Curtis, Donald
    JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN DENTAL ASSOCIATION, 2016, 147 (06): : 389 - 389
  • [9] Athletic Trainers Should Utilize Spinal Manipulation in Clinical Practice
    Vesci, Brian
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF ATHLETIC THERAPY & TRAINING, 2012, 17 (01): : 14 - 16
  • [10] Investigation tools for metabolic enzymes in clinical practice
    Samer, C. F.
    Rollason, V.
    Lorenzini, K. Ing
    Daali, Y.
    Desmeules, J. A.
    DOULEUR ET ANALGESIE, 2013, 26 (04): : 241 - 247