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Mindfulness-Based Interventions for Perioperative Pain Management and Opioid Risk Reduction Following Surgery: A Stepped Care Approach.

The American surgeon
May 1, 2024
R Lynae Roberts et al. (3 authors)
ReviewJournal ArticleHuman Study
Study Details

Study Goal

The researchers aimed to examine the empirical evidence for the perioperative use of mindfulness interventions and propose a mindfulness-based stepped care approach for managing preoperative pain, anxiety, and postoperative complications.

Results Summary

The study found strong evidence supporting mindfulness techniques in alleviating clinical symptoms relevant to surgical contexts, including preoperative pain and anxiety, and preventing postoperative chronic pain or opioid misuse. More extensive mindfulness interventions were effective for patients with persistent high pain levels or prolonged opioid use after surgery.

Population

Patients undergoing surgical procedures, particularly those at risk for chronic pain or opioid misuse.

Effective Dosage

Not specified

Duration

Not specified

Interactions

None mentioned

Extracted Claims (5)
InterventionDirectionEndpointPopulationDosageImpactClaim #
mindfulness techniques
decrease
clinical symptomology relevant to surgical contexts
randomized clinical trials
-
found strong evidence for the value
#1
brief mindfulness
decrease
preoperative pain and anxiety
patients
-
to treat
#2
brief mindfulness
decrease
postoperative chronic pain or opioid misuse
patients
-
prevent development of
#3
more extensive mindfulness-based interventions
decrease
high pain levels or prolonged opioid use after surgery
patients who continue to experience
-
provided to
#4
mindfulness
decrease
pain and opioid use
-
-
analgesic and opioid sparing effects
#5
Abstract

Surgical procedures often improve health and function but can sometimes also result in iatrogenic effects, including chronic pain and opioid misuse. Due to the known risks of opioids and the physical, emotional, and financial suffering that often accompanies chronic pain, there has been a call for greater use of complementary non-pharmacological treatments like mindfulness-based interventions. Mindfulness can be broadly described as an attentional state involving moment-by-moment meta-awareness of thoughts, emotions, and body sensations. An expanding number of randomized clinical trials have found strong evidence for the value of mindfulness techniques in alleviating clinical symptomology relevant to surgical contexts. The purpose of this review is to examine the empirical evidence for the perioperative use of mindfulness interventions. We present a mindfulness-based stepped care approach that first involves brief mindfulness to treat preoperative pain and anxiety and prevent development of postoperative chronic pain or opioid misuse. More extensive mindfulness-based interventions are then provided to patients who continue to experience high pain levels or prolonged opioid use after surgery. Finally, we review psychophysiological mechanisms of action that may be integral to the analgesic and opioid sparing effects of mindfulness.

Medical Subject Headings (MeSH)
HumansAnalgesics, OpioidMindfulnessChronic PainPain ManagementOpioid-Related DisordersPain, Postoperative
Study Links
Quality Scores
SafetyNot Assessed
Efficacy85/10
Quality90/10
Citation Metrics
Total Citations5
Citations/Year5.0
Relative Citation Ratio2.41
Research Impact Scores
APT Score0.75
Weight Score3.09
Normalized Score0.72
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