The choice of anesthesia for acute abdomen surgery patients and its influence on gastrointestinal function recovery.

2021 
Objective: To study the clinical anesthesia options for patients undergoing acute abdomen surgery and its effect on the recovery of patients’ gastrointestinal function. Methods: 120 patients who underwent abdomen surgery in our hospital from January 2018 to January 2019 were recruited as the research cohort and placed into group A (n=40) or group B (n=80) according to different anesthesia method each underwent. Group A was administered combined spinal-epidural anesthesia, and group B was administered general anesthesia with tracheal intubation. The anesthesia-related time indicators, the postoperative analgesia, the complication rates (CR), the gastric function indicators, and the gastrointestinal function recovery times were compared between the two groups. Results: Group A’s anesthesia-related time indicators were significantly lower than group B’s (P 0.05). The motilin and ghrelin levels in group A were significantly higher than they were in group B (P<0.05). The gastrointestinal function recovery time in group A was notably less than it was in group B (P<0.05). Conclusion: Spinal-epidural anesthesia is a preferred technique because of its strengths in gastric function and operation success rates by taking patients’ actual situations into consideration.
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