Editorial Acesso aberto Revisado por pares

Risks of interrupting drug treatment before surgery

2000; BMJ; Volume: 321; Issue: 7263 Linguagem: Inglês

10.1136/bmj.321.7263.719

ISSN

0959-8138

Autores

David W. Noble,

Tópico(s)

Abdominal Surgery and Complications

Resumo

Millions of patients worldwide have surgery each year. As well as using a variety of recreational drugs, such as caffeine, tobacco, and alcohol, many of these patients are prescribed therapeutic drugs for concurrent diseases. These drugs are taken for their positive therapeutic benefits, and abrupt interruptions lead at best to a loss of effect and at worst to rebound exacerbations of diseases.1 Unfortunately, surgery, and major abdominal surgery in particular, can cause patients to abstain from their usual drug treatment. After major abdominal surgery gastric emptying is delayed, making administration of drugs by the oral or nasogastric routes unreliable.2-4 Surgical patients may be particularly vulnerable to complications caused by abstention from drug treatment because of the adaptive and maladaptive physiological and psychological stresses related to surgical trauma that may increase the risk of organ dysfunction. 5 6 However, there is little systematic evidence that quantifies the risks of the abrupt withdrawal of therapeutic drugs in the postoperative setting. An observational study by Kennedy and colleagues of over 1000 admissions for general surgery and vascular surgery has made an important preliminary contribution …

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