Objective To examine the clinical utility of postoperation symptom inventory. Methods According to the current cancer symptom assessment tools, clinical guidelines and expert interviews, we preliminarily selected 10 common symptoms as an alternative item. Postoperative symptom assessment scale of lung cancer patients was formulated through expert evaluation. And 383 patients in eight hospitals were evaluated and validated using the scale to analyze the reliability and validity. Results Postoperation symptom inventory was easy to operate and evaluate for postoperative lung cancer patients in 8 symptoms (pain, shortness of breath, fatigue, cough, insomnia, throat pain, sweating and constipation). The scale was with high reliability. Cronbach' s α was 0.888. This scale was also with reliable validity. Content validity index was 0.900. There were two common factors with high cumulative proportion in variance(47.70% and 57.46%). And each question had high factor load and communality (>0.40) in the exploratory factor analysis. Conclusion The postoperation symptom inventory has excellent reliability and validity in patients with lung cancer surgery.
Objective To explore the factors of postoperative cough in lung cancer patients. Methods Totally 130 lung cancer patients of single medical team (average age of 58.75±9.34 years, 65 males and 65 females), from February 2016 to February 2017 in the Department of Thoracic Surgery of West China Hospital of Sichuan University, were investigated by Mandarin Chinese version of the Leicester Cough Questionnaire (LCQ-MC). We analyzed and calculated the preoperative and postoperative scores of LCQ-MC, Cronbach α and the influencing factor. Results The preoperative score of LCQ-MC's physiological dimension was significantly lower in the postoperative cough group (6.30±0.76) than that of the postoperative non-cough group (6.56±0.60,P=0.044), while the preoperative total score of LCQ-MC (19.53±1.78, 20.03±1.45) was not statistically different (P=0.080). The postoperative score of LCQ-MC was significantly lower in the postoperative cough group (17.32±2.79) than that of the postoperative non-cough group (19.70±1.39,P<0.001). And the scores of physiological, psychological and social dimension were significantly lower in the postoperative cough group (5.32 ±1.14, 5.73±1.14, 6.23±0.89) than those of the postoperative non-cough group (6.25±0.63, 6.67±0.54, 6.78±0.49) (P values were all less than 0.001). The result of multi-factor logistic regression analysis showed the condition of preoperative cough symptom (OR=0.354, 95%CI=0.126–0.994, P=0.049) and anesthesia time (OR=1.021, 95% CI=1.003–1.040, P=0.021) were the risk factors. Conclusion The risk factors of postoperative cough symptoms in lung cancer patients are the condition of preoperative cough symptoms and anesthesia time.
Objective To clearly define and describe the difference of analgesic actions and side effects between dezocine and parecoxib sodium in video-assisted thoracic surgery (VATS) lobectomy. Methods Ninety patients underwent thoracotomy (lobectomy) and were hospitalized in the Department of Thoracic Surgery, West China Hospital, Sichuan University between August 2015 and January 2016. Patients were randomly divided into two groups including a parecoxib sodium group (a PG group, 43 patients) and a dezocine group (a DG group, 47 patients). We analyzed the occurrence of side effects in the two groups, as well as other outcomes including visual analogous scores and location of the pain et al. Results The occurrences of nausea, vomit and abdominal distention in the PG group (9.30%, 2.33%, 13.95%) were significantly lower than those of the DG group (25.53%, 17.02%, 40.43% , P=0.046, P=0.032, P=0.009) in the early period after operation. Pain scores at the postoperative 12 h, 24 h, 48 h and 72 h in the PG group (2.56±0.96, 2.47±0.96, 1.93±0.99, 0.98±1.24) were better than those of the DG group (4.00±1.60, 3.62±1.48, 3.36±1.55, 2.47±1.78,P=0.000, P=0.000, P=0.000, P=0.002). And the same results were found in the postoperative coughing VAS assessment. The mostly reported pain location was the chest drainage, incision site and chest wall in turn. Postoperative pain properties, in turn, were swelling, stabbing pain and numbness. Conclusion Postoperative pain after VATS lobectomy may be adequately controlled using parecoxib sodium. The low pain scores and decreased adverse effects are achieved.