Abstract

BackgroundCatastrophic thinking and fear-avoidance belief are negatively influencing severe acute pain following surgery causing delayed ambulation and discharge. We aimed to examine if a preoperative intervention of cognitive-behavioural therapy (CBT) could influence the early postsurgical outcome following lumbar spinal fusion surgery (LSF).MethodsNinety patients undergoing LSF due to degenerative spinal disorders were randomly allocated to either the CBT group or the control group. Both groups received surgery and postoperative rehabilitation. In addition, the CBT group received a preoperative intervention focussed on pain coping using a CBT approach. Primary outcome was back pain during the first week (0–10 scale). Secondary outcomes were mobility, analgesic consumption, and length of hospitalisation. Data were retrieved using self-report questionnaires, assessments made by physical therapists and from medical records.ResultsNo difference between the groups’ self-reported back pain (p = 0.76) was detected. Independent mobility was reached by a significantly larger number of patients in the CBT group than the control group during the first three postoperative days. Analgesic consumption tended to be lower in the CBT group, whereas length of hospitalisation was unaffected by the CBT intervention.ConclusionParticipation in a preoperative CBT intervention appeared to facilitate mobility in the acute postoperative phase, despite equally high levels of self-reported acute postsurgical pain in the two groups, and a slightly lower intake of rescue analgesics in the CBT group. This may reflect an overall improved ability to cope with pain following participation in the preoperative CBT intervention.Trial registrationThe study was approved by the Danish Protection Agency (2011-41-5899) and the Ethics Committee of the Central Denmark Region (M-20110047). The trial was registered in Current Controlled Trials (ISRCTN42281022).

Highlights

  • Catastrophic thinking and fear-avoidance belief are negatively influencing severe acute pain following surgery causing delayed ambulation and discharge

  • The purpose of our study was to investigate whether a preoperative cognitive-behavioural therapy (CBT) intervention had a positive effect on acute postsurgical pain, mobility, use of analgesics, and length of hospitalisation

  • These pain levels are high compared with the results of the other studies, generally reporting postoperative pain levels below 3 points [6, 7, 13]. These differences may be due to different methods for reporting acute postsurgical pain, as these studies reported pain using visual analogue scale (VAS) scales where we used the numeric rating scale (NRS) scale

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Summary

Introduction

Catastrophic thinking and fear-avoidance belief are negatively influencing severe acute pain following surgery causing delayed ambulation and discharge. The available knowledge about acute postsurgical pain in patients undergoing lumbar spinal fusion surgery (LSF) is limited. One comparing different analgesic methods and one comparing different surgical techniques, found patients to report pain levels below 3 on a VAS scale. One of these studies measured pain on the first three postoperative days [6], and the other on the third postoperative day and on the day of discharge, respectively [7]

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