AI Article Synopsis

  • The study aimed to evaluate and rank various non-pharmacological methods for relieving pain after cardiac surgery, focusing on comprehensive comparisons among those interventions.
  • Previous reviews showed non-pharmacological treatments reduce pain, but this research quantitatively compared their effectiveness for the first time.
  • Results indicated that transcutaneous electrical nerve stimulation is the most effective method, followed by acupressure and music therapies, but none of the interventions significantly reduced opioid use or anxiety levels.

Article Abstract

Objective: To investigate and rank the evidence for the efficacy of non-pharmacological interventions in relieving pain after cardiac surgery using comprehensive comparisons.

Background: Although several previous systematic reviews and meta-analyses showed that non-pharmacological interventions effectively control and reduce pain after cardiac surgery, none quantitatively compared the effect of these different types of interventions.

Design: Systematic review and Bayesian network meta-analysis based on the Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses for Network Meta-Analysis guidelines.

Methods: Six databases were searched from inception to April 2021 to collect all published evidence from randomised clinical trials. One author extracted the relevant information from the eligible trials; a second author independently reviewed the data. Before analysing the extracted data, two investigators independently assessed the quality of the included studies. Conventional meta-analysis was conducted using either fixed- or random-effects models according to statistical heterogeneity. The Bayesian network meta-analysis was conducted using the consistency model.

Results: We identified 42 randomised clinical trials comparing 14 groups with 4253 patients. Transcutaneous electrical nerve stimulation, acupressure, music and massage were effective for pain relief, with transcutaneous electrical nerve stimulation being associated with the best probability of successful pain relief after cardiac surgery (cumulative ranking curve surface, 0.97; probability, 77.03%). Acupressure (cumulative ranking curve surface, 0.79; probability, 30.69%) was the second-best option. However, there was no evidence that any pair-up intervention significantly reduced opioid use or anxiety.

Conclusions: These findings suggest that transcutaneous electrical nerve stimulation, acupressure, music and massage may effectively alleviate postoperative cardiac pain, with transcutaneous electrical nerve stimulation representing the best choice for pain relief.

Relevance To Clinical Practice: The results of this network meta-analysis can guide patients after cardiac surgery and healthcare providers to make optimal decisions in managing postoperative cardiac pain.

Trial Registration: PROSPERO CRD42021246183.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/jocn.16482DOI Listing

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