ZHOU Feng. Analysis Flurbiprofen Ester and Sufentanil Joint for Intestinal Tumor Postoperative Metabolic Toning Effect[J]. Chinese journal of experimental traditional medical formulae, 2013, 19(8): 326-328.
DOI:
ZHOU Feng. Analysis Flurbiprofen Ester and Sufentanil Joint for Intestinal Tumor Postoperative Metabolic Toning Effect[J]. Chinese journal of experimental traditional medical formulae, 2013, 19(8): 326-328. DOI: 10.11653/syfj2013080326.
Analysis Flurbiprofen Ester and Sufentanil Joint for Intestinal Tumor Postoperative Metabolic Toning Effect
Objective: To comparative analysis flurbiprofen ester joint sufentanil
and used alone sufentanil
in the patients after intestinal surgery produced by the analgesic effect and metabolic toning effect. Method: Will be in february 2011-July 2012 received intestinal cancer radical operation of 80 patients as experimental investigation of the sample
random divided into sufentanil analgesic group (group A
n=40) and fluorine than flurbiprofen ester joint sufentanil analgesic group (group B
n=40). Due to A
B group of patients after surgery after 3 days shall not eat
can only through the week intravenous nutrition supplement. In this time logging A
B group of patients in the stage of fast the tumor necrosis factor-α(TNF-α)
body temperature numerical
cortisol
nitrogen balance
the integral effect of analgesia
interleukin-6(IL-6) and adrenal line changes. Result: The two groups of analgesic score difference was statistically significant. In the third day A
B group compared with patients who the analgesic effect of 1 day all appeared obviously improved. Postoperative body temperature
negative nitrogen balance
TNF-α and IL-6 change group B than a group obviously. But adrenaline numerical and cortex leaven numerical and no apparent change. Conclusion: Compared with the use of a single sufentanil on postoperative analgesia
sufentanil and flurbiprofen ester mixed analgesic effect and no obvious advantages
but sufentanil and flurbiprofen ester mixture can play a good postoperative conditioning effect.