Immersive Virtual Reality for Postoperative Pain Among Older Adults: A Scoping Review.

Christina Keny, Bhagvat Maheta, Karl Lorenz, Marcia M Russell, Heather Leutwyler, Laura M Wagner, Victoria Tang, Linda Park
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Abstract

Objective: The aim is to map out and describe, through a scoping review, the current evidence on immersive virtual reality (IVR) for postoperative pain management in surgical older adults.

Background: Managing postoperative pain in older adults through pharmacological interventions poses inherent complexity and risk to the patient. There is a growing interest in nonpharmacological interventions, including IVR, to address postoperative pain in older adults. However, IVR use for postoperative pain across a spectrum of surgical procedures remains largely unknown in the older adult demographic.

Methods: A comprehensive literature search of 5 databases was conducted through April 2024. Inclusion criteria were: (1) mean/median age greater than 65; (2) patients underwent surgical procedures; (3) the intervention group received IVR before, during, or after surgery; and (4) numerical postoperative pain scores were collected. Study titles/abstracts underwent initial screening against inclusion/exclusion criteria, followed by full-text screening. A narrative report was compiled with the identified studies.

Results: This scoping review yielded 10 studies. Three main findings emerged: (1) IVR for postoperative pain occurred predominantly in total joint replacement surgery; (2) while over half of the studies in this review indicated that IVR could improve postoperative pain management, weak to moderate study designs and small sample sizes limited the ability to draw firm conclusions about IVR use in older adults; and (3) there was significant heterogeneity in IVR administration and program content offered.

Conclusions: Despite common misconceptions that older adults are averse to new technology, this scoping review suggests that IVR for postoperative pain in older surgical adults holds potential as an acceptable and feasible intervention. This review highlights the need for more rigorous randomized clinical trials on IVR efficacy in older adults across a more diverse spectrum of surgical procedures and older adult subgroups (eg, underrepresented minority groups or those with physical/cognitive limitations).

Abstract Image

沉浸式虚拟现实治疗老年人术后疼痛:范围综述。
目的:目的是绘制和描述,通过范围审查,沉浸式虚拟现实(IVR)在手术老年人术后疼痛管理的当前证据。背景:通过药物干预治疗老年人术后疼痛对患者具有固有的复杂性和风险。有越来越多的兴趣在非药物干预,包括IVR,以解决老年人术后疼痛。然而,在老年人中,IVR用于外科手术术后疼痛的应用在很大程度上仍然未知。方法:到2024年4月,对5个数据库进行综合文献检索。纳入标准为:(1)平均/中位年龄大于65岁;(2)接受外科手术的患者;(3)干预组术前、术中、术后均接受IVR;(4)术后疼痛数值评分。根据纳入/排除标准对研究标题/摘要进行初步筛选,然后对全文进行筛选。根据已查明的研究汇编了一份叙述性报告。结果:本综述纳入了10项研究。主要有三个发现:(1)IVR术后疼痛主要发生在全关节置换术中;(2)虽然本综述中超过一半的研究表明IVR可以改善术后疼痛管理,但弱至中度的研究设计和小样本量限制了得出关于老年人使用IVR的确切结论的能力;(3) IVR管理和提供的节目内容存在显著的异质性。结论:尽管常见的误解是老年人反对新技术,但这一范围审查表明,IVR治疗老年手术成人术后疼痛具有可接受和可行的干预潜力。这篇综述强调了对IVR在老年人中的疗效进行更严格的随机临床试验的必要性,这些临床试验涉及更多样化的外科手术和老年人亚组(例如,代表性不足的少数群体或有身体/认知限制的老年人)。
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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