The Effect of Respiratory Exercise After Laparoscopic Surgery
NCT ID: NCT05624346
Last Updated: 2023-11-14
Study Results
The study team has not published outcome measurements, participant flow, or safety data for this trial yet. Check back later for updates.
Basic Information
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COMPLETED
NA
90 participants
INTERVENTIONAL
2022-09-26
2023-09-25
Brief Summary
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This increases patient satisfaction and reduces morbidity and mortality. In the literature, it has been stated that respiratory exercises reduce the level of anxiety in different patient groups in the postoperative period and increase the quality of sleep and recovery.
Among the duties and responsibilities of nurses working in surgical clinics are to provide breathing exercise training to patients in the preoperative period and to ensure that it is applied in the postoperative period.
This study was planned to determine the effect of respiratory exercise applied to laparoscopic surgery patients on postoperative pain, anxiety, nausea-vomiting and respiratory parameters.
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Detailed Description
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Laparoscopic surgery (LC) enables the patient to experience the desired result more aesthetically, stress-free and less painful with smaller incisions in the postoperative period. This increases patient satisfaction and reduces morbidity and mortality.
It is made with small incisions without exposing large tissues, which is inevitable in LC surgery. Less tissue dissection provides a lower level of neuroendocrine and metabolic response to stress in humans. Postoperative pain and need for analgesia are reduced. It accelerates the recovery process of the patient and helps him return to daily life in a shorter time. It reduces the patient's hospital stay. It increases comfort and quality of life, provides less suppression of the immune system.
LC has a lower mortality rate in addition to reducing the incidence of complications such as cosmetic problems, bleeding, injury, infection, inflammation, ileus. All these make LC more advantageous than other surgical methods. Pain, anxiety, nausea and vomiting are among the most common complications in the early postoperative period. In addition to pharmacological methods, non-pharmacological methods are also used to eliminate complications. Breathing exercise, which is the first step of relaxation, is one of the frequently used non-pharmacological methods.
With breathing exercises, it is ensured that the respiratory rate and depth are regulated, the muscles of the assisted respiration relax, and the efficiency of respiration is increased. The most commonly used breathing exercises are pursed lip breathing (pursed lip breathing) and diaphragmatic breathing. Nurses should explain the steps of the procedure in the exercise applications in a way that the patient can understand and ensure that they practice the exercises regularly.
Preoperative patient education, which can help prevent post-operative problems and early recovery; with explanation of surgical procedures, deep breathing, coughing, leg exercises, turning in bed, mobilization and reducing pain etc. includes topics. Among the duties and responsibilities of nurses working in surgical clinics are to provide breathing exercise training to patients in the preoperative period and to ensure its implementation in the postoperative period.
Post-operative patients are not ready to learn anything new due to pain and other reasons. Therefore, these trainings should be completed before the surgery. The purpose of giving deep breathing and coughing exercises; Expanding the decreased lung capacity during and after anesthesia, restoring the perfusion-ventilation balance and regulating its distribution, increasing oxygenation, protecting the airways, and enabling the secretions in the airways to be expelled more easily with effective coughing.
Teaching the breathing exercises, which is one of the basic duties of the surgical nurse, to the patients, explaining the importance of this and having it done regularly, increases the oxygenation of the tissues and affects the healing quality positively. In the literature, it has been stated that respiratory exercises reduce the level of anxiety and increase the quality of sleep and recovery in different patient groups in the postoperative period.
Nurses should take an active role in diagnosing nausea, vomiting, pain and respiratory problems that may occur in the postoperative period, planning and applying the necessary pharmacological and non-pharmacological methods, monitoring and evaluating the results of treatment, and should be able to prevent problems that may develop.
This study was planned to determine the effect of respiratory exercises on postoperative pain, anxiety, nausea-vomiting and respiratory parameters after laparoscopic surgery.
Conditions
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Study Design
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RANDOMIZED
CROSSOVER
SUPPORTIVE_CARE
SINGLE
Study Groups
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Experimental Group
After the operation, breathing exercises will be applied to the patients.
Deep-Breathing Exercises
In addition to routine care in the hospital, the patient will be taught pre-operative breathing exercises. After surgery the patients do deep-breathing exercises every hour.
Control Group
There will be no intervention other than routine nursing care practices in the hospital.
No interventions assigned to this group
Interventions
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Deep-Breathing Exercises
In addition to routine care in the hospital, the patient will be taught pre-operative breathing exercises. After surgery the patients do deep-breathing exercises every hour.
Eligibility Criteria
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Inclusion Criteria
* 18 years and over,
* No neurological or psychological problems,
* Fluent in Turkish and able to communicate,
* No respiratory disease,
* Brought to the post-operative service,
* Planned cases,
* Patients who underwent laparoscopic general surgery (such as laparoscopic cholecystectomy, colon, inguinal hernia, appendectomy, incisional hernia, sleeve gastrectomy) under general anesthesia were included in the study.
Exclusion Criteria
* Not 18 years of age or older
* Having neurological or psychological problems,
* Those who do not speak Turkish and cannot communicate
* Having respiratory disease
* Transferred to the intensive care unit after surgery,
* Emergency and unplanned cases
* Cases that converted from laparoscopic surgery to open surgery under general anesthesia were not included in the study.
18 Years
ALL
Yes
Sponsors
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Bartın Unıversity
OTHER
Responsible Party
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Suna Uzun
Student
Principal Investigators
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Suna UZUN, Msc. Student
Role: PRINCIPAL_INVESTIGATOR
Bartın Unıversity
Elif KARAHAN, Assoc. Prof.
Role: STUDY_DIRECTOR
Bartın Unıversity
Locations
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Bartin Hospital of State
Bartın, Merkez, Turkey (Türkiye)
Countries
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Provided Documents
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Document Type: Study Protocol
Other Identifiers
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2022-SBB-0086
Identifier Type: -
Identifier Source: org_study_id
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