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Preoperative Serum Leptin Level Is Associated with Preoperative Pain Threshold and Postoperative Analgesic Consumption in Patients Undergoing Cesarean Section
Author(s) -
Seringec Akkececi Nurten,
Oksuz Gozen,
Urfalioğlu Aykut,
Gunesacar Ramazan,
Bakacak Murat,
Arslan Mahmut,
Kelleci Bekir Mehmet
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
medical principles and practice
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.426
H-Index - 45
eISSN - 1423-0151
pISSN - 1011-7571
DOI - 10.1159/000500556
Subject(s) - original paper
Objective: This study aimed to investigate the preoperative level of serum leptin in cesarean section (C-section) patients with and without acute labor pain and its association with postoperative analgesic consumption and preoperative pain threshold. Materials and Methods: Preoperative leptin levels, preoperative pain threshold, postoperative analgesic consumption in the first 24 h, and postoperative pain severity (visual analog scale (VAS) scores at 1, 2, 4, 6, 12, and 24 h postoperatively) in C-section patients with labor pain (emergency C-section; n = 21) and without labor pain (elective C-section; n = 25) were compared. Results: There were no signicant differences between the groups regarding the demographic characteristics. Leptin levels, postoperative VAS scores, and analgesic consumption were significantly higher in the group with labor pain, while the preoperative pain threshold was lower. Serum leptin levels correlated negatively with pain threshold and positively with postoperative analgesic consumption. Multiple linear regression analyses in our study revealed that the preoperative leptin levels and having an emergency C-section independently affected the postoperative analgesic consumption and preoperative pain threshold, whereas their combined effects on these parameters were statistically not significant. Conclusion: Preoperative levels of serum leptin were higher in C-section patients with labor pain than in those without labor pain, and increased serum leptin levels were associated with decreased preoperative pain threshold and increased postoperative analgesic consumption in our study population. Postoperative analgesic requirements may vary among patients, and their requirements might be predicted using preoperative indicators. Serum levels of leptin might be one such indicator and this warrants further studies with larger sample sizes.

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