AI Article Synopsis

  • The study aimed to examine the link between preoperative depression and anxiety symptoms with pelvic floor issues after urogynecologic surgery, assessing factors like pain, quality of life, and overall satisfaction post-surgery.
  • Researchers conducted a cohort study with 60 women, using various questionnaires to gather data before and after surgery, and found that while most had minimal depression and anxiety, those symptoms did correlate with higher immediate postoperative pain.
  • The results indicated significant improvements in pelvic floor distress and anxiety scores post-surgery, but baseline psychological symptoms did not significantly impact postoperative pelvic floor symptom burden or surgical satisfaction.

Article Abstract

Objectives: We aimed to explore the correlation between perioperative symptoms of depression and anxiety with pelvic floor symptoms after urogynecologic surgery. Postoperative pain, goal attainment, quality of life, and satisfaction were assessed.

Methods: A prospective cohort study of women undergoing inpatient urogynecologic surgery was conducted. Preoperative questionnaires included Beck Depression and Beck Anxiety Inventories, Pain Catastrophizing Scale, Pelvic Floor Distress Inventory, Pelvic Floor Impact Questionnaire, and a detailed goals and perioperative supports questionnaire. Postoperative pain was assessed via the Short-Form McGill Pain Questionnaire. Questionnaires were readministered 6 weeks postoperatively. Descriptive statistics were obtained. Spearman correlation determined the relationship between preoperative and postoperative questionnaire scores. Quantile regression assessed the potential moderating effect of patient characteristics on these relationships.

Results: Sixty women (mean age, 58.5 years) were recruited. Fifty-seven (95%) completed follow-up. Most common surgical indication was pelvic organ prolapse (59/60; 98%). Depression and anxiety symptoms were minimal in most women. There was significant median change in preoperative to postoperative scores for Beck Anxiety Inventory (-2.0, P = 0.011), Pelvic Floor Distress Inventory-20 (-69.4, P < 0.001), and Pelvic Floor Impact Questionnaire-7 (-23.8, P = 0.001). Baseline depression and anxiety symptoms were correlated with higher immediate postoperative pain, but not other outcomes. The most common goal, achieved by 47 (92%) of 51, was to reduce condition-specific symptoms. Postoperative depression and anxiety symptoms, and pelvic floor distress and impact were significantly correlated.

Conclusions: Baseline depression and anxiety symptoms were not significantly associated with postoperative pelvic floor symptom burden or surgical satisfaction. Bothersome postoperative pelvic floor symptoms were associated with postoperative depressive symptoms.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1097/SPV.0000000000000582DOI Listing

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