Keywords

adolescents, hypnosis, Nuss procedure, pectus excavatum, postoperative pain

 

Authors

  1. Manworren, Renee C. B. PhD, APRN, FAAN
  2. Girard, Eric MD
  3. Verissimo, Ana Maria MD, MA, ABIHM
  4. Ruscher, Kimberly A. MD, MPH
  5. Santanelli, James P. MPH
  6. Weiss, Richard MD
  7. Hight, Donald MD

Abstract

Introduction: Nuss procedure, a minimally invasive thoracoscopic approach to repair pectus excavatum, results in a smaller scar but significant pain. The purpose of this Institutional Review Board-approved retrospective study was to compare postoperative pain management outcomes of adolescents who self-selected to receive or not receive preoperative self-hypnosis training before Nuss procedure. Self-hypnosis, an integrative medicine approach to pain management, may be more effective than traditional analgesics alone for managing postoperative pain.

 

Methods: In 2011, 8 of 22 patients who underwent Nuss procedure received preoperative self-hypnosis training and postoperative self-hypnosis coaching. Postoperatively, patients received epidural analgesia with local anesthetic, intravenous patient-controlled opioid analgesia, and intravenous nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs and transitioned to oral opioids and nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs.

 

Results: Self-hypnosis training was associated with use of fewer milligrams per hour of morphine equivalents (p = .005) and lower mean pain intensity over the first 5 days of hospital stay (p = .041). Despite the opioid-sparing effect of self-hypnosis training, nausea, vomiting, constipation, and hypoventilation were adverse effects experienced by patients in both groups.

 

Discussion: The results of this retrospective study suggest that self-hypnosis provides an opioid-sparing effect for managing moderate-to-severe pediatric postoperative pain after Nuss procedure. Further clinical studies are needed to validate the effectiveness of self-hypnosis for symptom management after painful pediatric surgical procedures.