Oxidative Stress Parameters after Abdominal Hysterectomy and their Relationships with Quality of Recovery

2018 
Study aimed to investigate relationship between oxidative stress markers and postoperative recovery in woman after abdominal hysterectomy, as well as to test the hypothesis that different analgesics differently influence redox status. The quality of recovery was evaluated with a QoR-40 questionnaire in fifty-one patients who underwent abdom inal hysterectomy, preoperatively and on the 1st, 2nd, 3rd postoperative days (POD1,2,3). Blood samples were collected at baseline (T0), 3 (T1), 24 (T2), 48 (T3) and 72 (T4) hours after surgery. Oxidative stress markers concentrations (TBARS, NO2-, H2O2, O2-) as well as antioxidative enzymes (SOD, CAT, and GSH) were analyzed. QoR-40 total score significantly declined on POD1 and POD2 and returned to baseline levels on POD3 (p 0.05). Changes in TBARS levels from T0 to T3 were statistically significant between the study subgroups primarily due to increase of the concentrations in patients receiving paracetamol (p=0.031). Patients age, duration of surgery and cigarette smoking status showed significant influcences on and association with some oxidative stress response markers (TBARS, О2-, CAT) (p<0.05). Women who underwent hysterectomy had significant changes of H2O2 and TBARS activity however, those changes were not associated with changes of QoR-40 total scores during recovery.
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