Title | A pilot study of preoperative heart rate variability predicting pain during local anesthetic varicose vein surgery. | ||
Author | Powezka, Katarzyna; Adjei, Tricia; von Rosenberg, Wilhelm; Normahani, Pasha; Goverdovsky, Valentin; Standfield, Nigel J; Mandic, Danilo P; Jaffer, Usman | ||
Journal | J Vasc Surg Venous Lymphat Disord | Publication Year/Month | 2019-May |
PMID | 30612970 | PMCID | -N/A- |
Affiliation + expend | 1.Imperial Vascular Unit, Imperial College Healthcare NHS Trust, London, United Kingdom. Electronic address: katarzyna.powezka@nhs.net. |
OBJECTIVE: Local anesthetic endovenous procedures were shown to reduce recovery time, to decrease postoperative pain, and to more quickly return the patient to baseline activities. However, a substantial number of patients experience pain during these procedures. The autonomic nervous system modulates pain perception, and its influence on stress response can be noninvasively quantified using heart rate variability (HRV) indices. The aim of our study was to evaluate whether preoperative baseline HRV can predict intraoperative pain during local anesthetic varicose vein surgery. METHODS: Patients scheduled for radiofrequency ablation were included in the study. They had their electrocardiograms recorded from a single channel of a custom-made amplifier. Each patient preoperatively filled in forms Y-1 and Y-2 of Spielberger\'s State and Trait Anxiety Inventory, completed the Aberdeen Varicose Vein Questionnaire, and rated anxiety level on a numeric scale. Postoperatively, patients filled in the pain they felt during the procedure on the numeric pain intensity scale. MATLAB software (MathWorks, Natick, Mass) was used to extract R waves and to generate HRV signals, and a mathematical model was created to predict the pain score for each patient. RESULTS: In multivariable analysis, we looked into correlation between reported patient\'s pain score (rPPS) and Aberdeen Varicose Vein Questionnaire score, preoperative forms Y-1 and Y-2, preoperative anxiety level, and predicted patient\'s pain (pPPS) score. Multivariable analysis found association only between rPPS and pPPS. The pPPS was significantly correlated with rPPS (R = 0.807; P < .001) with accuracy of prediction of 65.2%, which was calculated from R(2) on a linear regression model. CONCLUSIONS: This preliminary study shows that preoperative HRV can accurately predict patients\' pain, allowing patients with higher predicted score to have the procedure under general anesthesia.