Abstract

BackgroundSurgery for pelvic organ prolapse is a common surgical procedure. There is little research studying post-operative pain, contrasting with extensive literature on pain after childbirth trauma which shows that suture method has a significant effect on pain. We designed a protocol for a trial comparing suture techniques and post-operative pain, and conducted a pre-protocol pilot to inform our trial design.MethodsRoutine surgical data, post-operative pain scores (from 10 cm Visual Analogue Scales, VAS) and analgesic requirements were obtained from the notes of a cohort of women undergoing vaginal prolapse surgery. Median VAS scores at 4, 12 and 24 hours were compared by suture material used and method of closure (single continuous suture or interrupted sutures). The women whose data were obtained were invited to attend focus groups of up to six people in the twelve weeks following surgery. A semi structured question guide was used, and interviews were recorded, transcribed anonymously and analysed using the constant comparative method of grounded theory. Ethical approval was not sought because formal pre-protocol work is exempt for UK ethical requirements, but formal written consent on standard forms was obtained for publishing outcomes and anonymised comments from participants.ResultsComplete VAS data and operative details were available from 41 women. Surgery was completed using absorbable polyglactin sutures with continuous suturing (17 women) or interrupted sutures (24 women). Pain scores at 4 and 12 hours were similar; pain at 24 hours was greater in the women with interrupted sutures (median VAS 3 (range 0–8) versus 1.5 (0–8) (p = 0.0513). Analgesic needs were similar.Two focus groups (nine participants) revealed that women regarded post-operative pain as insignificant and not a topic worthy of formal research. It was apparent that the use, and especially removal of, vaginal packs was a practice associated with pain which women remembered as a significant part of their post-operative experience.ConclusionsFormal pre-protocol work is informative; we found a moderate difference in our proposed outcomes, suggesting a trial was feasible but women themselves were unconvinced of the need for formal research into pain following vaginal surgery.

Highlights

  • Surgery for pelvic organ prolapse is a common surgical procedure

  • All surgical procedures were carried out using a polyglactin suture material, so the analysis was restricted to type of suture method only

  • Pain scores at all times were low and there were no differences between median scores at any time interval between different suture techniques, the scores at 24 hours (1.5 for continuous sutures vs 3.0 for interrupted sutures) almost reached significance (p = 0.0513)

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Surgery for pelvic organ prolapse is a common surgical procedure. There is little research studying post-operative pain, contrasting with extensive literature on pain after childbirth trauma which shows that suture method has a significant effect on pain. There are over 1,500 articles studying methods of perineal suturing after childbirth, and the effects upon pain, including two Cochrane systematic reviews. Data from these could be considered analogous and relevant, since they and our research question both address suturing of the vaginal skin and perineum in relation to pain. The first review compared continuous suture techniques versus interrupted sutures for the closure of episiotomies or second degree tears (Kettle et al 2007) This included seven studies with 3,822 patients and found continuous closure to be preferable with lower pain scores and lesser analgesic requirements. Outcomes showed that use of catgut increased short term pain and that rapidly absorbable synthetic sutures (e.g. polyglycolic acid) were preferable to conventional synthetic sutures (Kettle et al 2010)

Methods
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call