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Cancer Recurrence and Regional Anesthesia: The Theories, the Data, and the Future in Outcomes
Author(s) -
Linda Le-Wendling,
Olga C. Nin,
Xavier Capdevila
Publication year - 2015
Publication title -
pain medicine
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.893
H-Index - 97
eISSN - 1526-4637
pISSN - 1526-2375
DOI - 10.1111/pme.12893
Subject(s) - medicine , perioperative , cancer , cancer surgery , context (archaeology) , anesthesia , clinical trial , anesthetic , cancer recurrence , local anesthetic , disease , regional anesthesia , surgery , paleontology , biology
More than one million people each year in the United States are diagnosed with cancer. Surgery is considered curative, but the perioperative phase represents a vulnerable period for residual disease to spread. Regional anesthesia has been proposed to reduce the incidence of recurrence by attenuating the sympathetic nervous system's response during surgery, reducing opioid requirements thus diminishing their immunosuppressant effects, and providing antitumor and anti-inflammatory effects directly through systemic local anesthetic action. In this article, we present a description of the perioperative period, a summary of the proposed hypotheses and available literature on the effects of regional anesthesia on cancer recurrence, and put regional anesthesia in context in regard to its potential role in reducing cancer recurrence during the perioperative period.

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