AI Article Synopsis

  • People who have surgery to fix their mouths usually can’t eat or drink for 6-14 days afterward, because doctors worry about complications.
  • A study looked at whether patients could start eating sooner (within 5 days) without having problems like mouth leaks or surgery failure.
  • The results showed that starting to eat earlier didn't cause more problems and helped patients leave the hospital sooner.

Article Abstract

Background: Traditionally, patients undergoing free flap reconstruction for oral cavity defects have been given nothing by mouth for 6-14 days post-operatively due to concern for orocutaneous fistula development.

Methods: Multiple databases were screened for studies assessing the rate of orocutaneous fistula formation in early (≤5 days) versus late (>5 days) feeding groups following oral cavity free flap reconstruction. Fixed- and random-effects meta-analyses were used.

Results: One randomized controlled trial, one prospective cohort, and three retrospective cohort studies were included. The early feeding group displayed no significant increase in orocutaneous fistula formation (RD = -0.02, p = 0.06) or free flap failure (RD = -0.01, p = 0.39), with a significantly shorter hospital length of stay (mean difference [days] = -2.43, p < 0.01).

Conclusions: While further prospective trials are necessary, initiation of oral intake before post-operative day 5 may be appropriate in properly selected patients following oral reconstruction.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/hed.27684DOI Listing

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