Potential mechanisms of multimodal prehabilitation effects on surgical complications: a narrative review.

IF 2.4 4区 医学 Q3 NUTRITION & DIETETICS
Daniel Sibley, Maggie Chen, Malcolm A West, Andrew G Matthew, Daniel Santa Mina, Ian Randall
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

Continuous advances in prehabilitation research over the past several decades have clarified its role in improving preoperative risk factors, yet the evidence demonstrating reduced surgical complications remains uncertain. Describing the potential mechanisms underlying prehabilitation and surgical complications represents an important opportunity to establish biological plausibility, develop targeted therapies, generate hypotheses for future research, and contribute to the rationale for implementation into the standard of care. In this narrative review, we discuss and synthesize the current evidence base for the biological plausibility of multimodal prehabilitation to reduce surgical complications. The goal of this review is to improve prehabilitation interventions and measurement by outlining biologically plausible mechanisms of benefit and generating hypotheses for future research. This is accomplished by synthesizing the available evidence for the mechanistic benefit of exercise, nutrition, and psychological interventions for reducing the incidence and severity of surgical complications reported by the American College of Surgeons National Surgical Quality Improvement Program (ACS-NSQIP). This review was conducted and reported in accordance with a quality assessment scale for narrative reviews. Findings indicate that prehabilitation has biological plausibility to reduce all complications outlined by NSQIP. Mechanisms for prehabilitation to reduce surgical complications include anti-inflammation, enhanced innate immunity, and attenuation of sympathovagal imbalance. Mechanisms vary depending on the intervention protocol and baseline characteristics of the sample. This review highlights the need for more research in this space while proposing potential mechanisms to be included in future investigations.

多模式康复对手术并发症的潜在影响机制:一篇叙述性综述。
在过去的几十年里,康复研究的不断进步已经明确了其在改善术前危险因素方面的作用,但证据表明减少手术并发症仍然不确定。描述康复和手术并发症的潜在机制是一个重要的机会,可以建立生物学上的合理性,开发靶向治疗,为未来的研究提出假设,并为实施标准护理提供理论依据。在这篇叙述性综述中,我们讨论并综合了目前的证据基础,以证明多模式康复减少手术并发症的生物学合理性。本综述的目的是通过概述生物学上合理的获益机制和为未来的研究提出假设来改进康复干预和测量。这是通过综合美国外科医师学会国家手术质量改进计划(ACS-NSQIP)报告的运动、营养和心理干预在减少手术并发症发生率和严重程度方面的机制益处的现有证据来完成的。本综述按照叙述性综述的质量评估量表进行和报道。研究结果表明,康复具有减少NSQIP概述的所有并发症的生物学合理性。康复治疗减少手术并发症的机制包括抗炎、增强先天免疫和减弱交感迷走神经失衡。机制取决于干预方案和样本的基线特征。这篇综述强调了在这一领域进行更多研究的必要性,同时提出了未来研究中可能包含的机制。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
6.50
自引率
2.90%
发文量
113
审稿时长
4-8 weeks
期刊介绍: Applied Physiology, Nutrition, and Metabolism publishes original research articles, reviews, and commentaries, focussing on the application of physiology, nutrition, and metabolism to the study of human health, physical activity, and fitness. The published research, reviews, and symposia will be of interest to exercise physiologists, physical fitness and exercise rehabilitation specialists, public health and health care professionals, as well as basic and applied physiologists, nutritionists, and biochemists.
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