Can you do things BEFORE surgery to help you heal? Journal time!

Posted on February 28, 2019

The latest November 2018 Aesthetic Surgery Journal had an article about “The Influence of Preoperative interventions on Postoperative Surgical Wound Healing in Patients Without Risk Factors: A Systematic Review.”  When you do this kind of study, it is a collation of prior studies done.  I think it is a good thing to look at.  There was a study a little while back which showed protein loading caused statistically significantly better healing in tummy tuck patients- better scars and lower infections.  If doing something simple like eating a few steaks can help you heal, what other tidbits are there out there?

They found 13 studies, all which were randomized trials.  (This means they were good science with randomized patients and controls.) Eight of these studies showed significantly better wound healing after a preoperative intervention.  They looked at these in three basic categories: SYSTEMIC interventions, TOPICAL applications, and PSYCHOLOGICAL interventions.

So what did they find?

SYSTEMIC TREATMENTS:

TOPICAL 

PSYCHOLOGIC INTERVENTION

All of these were aimed at lowering stress levels.  Why would this matter? People think psychological stress can affect wound healing by triggering inflammation.

So what do I think?

All of these are good things to think about.  It is hard to assess healing in surgery when there are so many factors affecting it.  These studies show that lowering stress, talking about the surgery, keeping warm, and doing scar care are beneficial.  This makes sense.  I remember a long time ago reading a study which showed patient anxiety and postoperative medication use were significantly reduced if you didn’t gloss over surgery,  Instead of candy coating everything,  “It’s all going to be fine….” , one should tell patients the truth of what to expect.  So I have always met with my patients one on one, and I discuss the reality in blunt terms of what to expect.

This article did not include the protein study I cited above.

I do not advocate Vitamin E (a study comparing it to mederma and kelocote shows kelocote is the best for scarring). I do not advocate yoga for post op patients (I fear they can tear something or cause swelling and bruising, particularly if they are bending over.) I do not give Valium to patients the night prior, as then patients can come in completely out of it and we cannot have a real discussion about their surgery (particularly important to do a final confirmation our surgical plan, size of implants, etc.).  My patients do get a relaxant about 20 minutes prior to surgery.

But I will keep reading. I find many pearls on wisdom in my journals.