Author:
Hamed Mohamed Ahmed,Goda Abeer Shaban,Abdelghaffar Rana Ahmed,Algyar Mohammad Fouad,Mohamed Maha Ahmed,Abdelhady Mahdy Ahmed
Abstract
Background
The Surgical Pleth Index (SPI) has been introduced to monitor intraoperative pain under general anesthesia. This study aimed to determine the optimum time to measure intraoperative SPI, which correlates better with postoperative pain.
Methods
This prospective blind study collected data from female patients scheduled for elective abdominal hysterectomy under general anesthesia. SPI was recorded 5 minutes after the skin incision and 10 minutes before recovery. After recovery, upon the ability to communicate, all patients were asked to quantify their pain level. The primary outcome was determining which SPI measurement correlates more with postoperative pain.
Results
In the current study, we found a statistically significant correlation between SPI 10 min before recovery and the highest NRS (r=0.555, p-value <0.001). With the highest sensitivity and specificity, the cut-off value of SPI at 10 minutes before recovery to differentiate between moderate and severe pain was 57. On the other hand, no significant correlation was observed between SPI 5 min after skin incision and the highest NRS. Also, SPI 10 at minutes was significantly correlated with postoperative tramadol consumption, which was unlike SPI at 5 minutes.
Conclusion
SPI is a good indicator for nociception. Pre-arousal SPI score correlates more with postoperative pain scores and opioid consumption than SPI score after skin incision. Also, SPI 10 minutes before recovery value of 57 was the cut-off value, with the highest sensitivity and specificity, to differentiate between moderate and severe pain.
Publisher
Bentham Science Publishers Ltd.