Preoperative Mechanical Bowel Evacuation Reduces Intraoperative Bleeding and Operation Time in Spinal Surgery

Study Design Randomized clinical trial. Purpose In this study, we evaluated the effect of mechanical evacuation of the bowels prior to operation on intraoperative bleeding. Overview of Literature Bleeding is the most significant complication in patients undergoing spinal surgery. Methods We randomly...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Majid Rezvani, Reza Abbasi, Homayoon Tabesh, Leila Dehghani, Shahaboddin Dolatkhah, Maryam Nasri, Mohsen Kolahdouzan, Rokhsareh Meamar
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Korean Spine Society 2018-06-01
Series:Asian Spine Journal
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Online Access:http://www.asianspinejournal.org/upload/pdf/asj-2018-12-3-459.pdf
Description
Summary:Study Design Randomized clinical trial. Purpose In this study, we evaluated the effect of mechanical evacuation of the bowels prior to operation on intraoperative bleeding. Overview of Literature Bleeding is the most significant complication in patients undergoing spinal surgery. Methods We randomly divided 108 individuals planned to undergo spinal surgery into two age-, sex-, and co-morbidity (especially preoperative hemoglobin [Hb])-matched groups of 54. The treatment group was administered polyethylene glycol (PEG) before the operation, whereas the control group was not. The exact amount (mL) of bleeding during operation, operative time, and approximate amount of blood transfused were recorded. The volume of bleeding and Hb level were also recorded 24 and 48 hours postoperatively. Results T-tests revealed that intraoperative bleeding, the volume of transfusion, and operative time were significantly lower in the treatment group than in the control group. Statistically significant correlations of intraoperative bleeding with age, body mass index (BMI), preoperative Hb levels, operative time, the volume of transfusion, hospitalization time, and 24- and 48-hour postoperative bleeding were observed (p =0.001, all). Repeated measures analysis of covariance after adjusting the covariate variables revealed that the volume of bleeding showed a near-significant trend in the treatment group compared with that in the control group (p =0.056). Diabetic females had the highest bleeding amount between the groups (p =0.03). Bleeding was higher in patients with higher BMI (p =0.02) and was related to operative time (p =0.001) in both the groups. Conclusions Preoperative gastrointestinal tract evacuation by PEG administration can decrease intraoperative bleeding in spinal surgeries; however, more research is imperative regarding PEG administration in surgical procedures for this purpose.
ISSN:1976-1902
1976-7846