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A must-do preparation step with your doctor before laparoscopic surgery if you wish to recover as quickly and naturally as possible!
Laparoscopic surgery is clearly a wonder of modern medicine.
Who would have thought that such a wide variety of minimally invasive surgical procedures could be performed with the assistance of a video camera as the surgeon’s “eyes”, several thin instruments, and only tiny incisions needed on the patient?
Gall bladder removal, appendicitis, gastric bypass, hernial repair, or GERD treatment are some of the most common reasons for using laparoscopic surgery today.
The benefits for patients are many including a faster recovery, shorter hospital stay, and smaller scars both internally and externally.
While overwhelmingly successful, the laparoscopic surgery experience could be enhanced significantly for the patient with a simple post-operative protocol, which, as of this writing, most doctors sadly don’t bother to perform.
This oversight persists even though solid research has demonstrated a significant reduction in post-operative pain with the need for strong narcotics greatly reduced or even eliminated.
Hence, it is up to the patient to be informed and find a surgeon willing to go the extra post-operative mile when it comes to laparoscopic surgery!.
Laparoscopic Surgery: What Most Patients Don’t Know
When laparoscopic surgery is performed, the first incision that is made allows the passage of a needle into the space of the abdominal cavity, taking care to stay clear of the organs.
Through this long, thin (Veress) needle, gas is pumped directly into the patient’s abdominal cavity.
The addition of gas to the abdomen essentially blows it up like a balloon, lifting the abdominal wall above the internal organs.
This creates a clearer viewing space for the surgeon to perform his/her work.
The addition of gas to the abdominal cavity also creates sufficient room for the laparoscopic instruments without the need for large incisions.
Gas is slowly and continually pumped into the abdomen to maintain this “gas dome” until surgery is complete.
Most surgeons prefer carbon dioxide (CO2) gas for this purpose. CO2 is used because it is a component of breathable air, common to the human body, and can be rapidly absorbed by tissue and blood for removal from the body by the respiratory and excretory systems.
Carbon dioxide is also non-flammable. This is very important because of the electrosurgical devices commonly used during laparoscopic surgery.
While the addition of gas to a patient’s abdominal cavity is important for the success of the operation, the downside is that it causes immense pain and extended suffering after the laparoscopic procedure is over.
This is because it takes time for the gas to be absorbed by the patient’s tissues and released via respiration or the excretory system.
This sometimes excruciating post-op pain caused exclusively by the gas used during surgery, not the surgery itself, can take several forms depending on where the excess gas settles:
- Intraperitoneal pain: If the excess gas is trapped outside of the intestines, but inside the abdominal cavity, it can irritate the lining of the abdominal organs or sometimes the organs themselves causing sharp abdominal pains that can last for days or even weeks after the laparoscopic surgery is complete.
- Shoulder and chest pain: If the excess gas becomes trapped against the diaphragm muscle itself, the vagus nerve can be affected which can cause pain when breathing or intense shoulder and chest pain.
One friend of mine who recently had laparoscopic surgery for appendicitis described the gas pain as much worse than natural childbirth! It was so intense in her shoulder and upper chest area that she thought she was having a heart attack! She also said she was “begging” for the narcotics when the anesthesia wore off.
Unfortunately, the typical treatment for this frequently debilitating pain post-laparoscopic surgery is usually strong narcotic pain meds with their many dangerous side effects and risks for addiction.
In addition, once a patient stops using narcotics for pain, it can take many weeks or even months to detoxify them from the body.
More natural therapies are also used such as walking as quickly after surgery as possible.
Massage will also help release trapped gas and encourage absorption by the body tissues for removal.
However, these don’t work quickly enough in many cases, so strong pain meds are generally required.
Simple Solutions for Post-Op Laparoscopic Gas Pain
The amazing thing about the gas pain experienced by nearly all people who have laparoscopic surgery on the abdominal or pelvic region is that it can be prevented!
Some surgeons are already doing the right thing and routinely removing the gas in a very simple post-op procedure as part of their standard of care, but, believe it or not, most do not!
In my view, there is simply no excuse for this and it borders on malpractice.
I mean, really?
Why would a surgeon condemn their patients to pain that is likely to be excruciating and that will require narcotics to handle until it dissipates several days to a week or more later when all you have to do is something very simple to prevent it that is backed up by solid, causative research?
The only reason that comes to my mind as to why a surgeon wouldn’t voluntarily remove the pumped in gas from the abdomen of his/her patients is because insurance companies typically only pay a certain amount for a common procedure like gall bladder removal.
Anything additional that isn’t strictly required will come out of the hospital or surgeon’s pocket directly or be paid by the patient.
If that’s the case, then at least give the patient the option to pay for it and most likely reduce their need for narcotics during recovery.
What’s happening now is that patients aren’t being told anything about the easy ways to remove the gas after surgery which would spare them a lot of pain and suffering.
These two methods for removing the gas after laparoscopic surgery are: (1)
- Pulmonary recruitment maneuver (PRM) – A fancy term for expanding the lungs fully using a conventional ventilator or high-frequency oscillation device while the patient is in a supine or prone position. This full and complete lung expansion forces the gas out of the abdominal cavity from the open surgical ports.
- Infusion of saline solution – A simpler and probably more cost-effective alternative involves the use of a saline infusion which fills the abdomen with warm saline at the end of laparoscopic surgery. Since CO2 is lighter than saline, it rises and escapes through the open ports. Research suggests that the use of saline is more effective overall than PRM.
Both of these approaches work well and are backed up by research as being highly effective for preventing patient distress from trapped gas.
The Journal of the Society of Laparoendoscopic Surgeons published a study where 40 patients were randomly enrolled into one of the following 2 groups. (2)
Nineteen patients entered Group I where the residual CO2 was evacuated by abdominal compression and served as the study control group.
The remaining 21 patients entered Group II, where the residual CO2 was evacuated by pumping warm saline into the abdomen until it spilled out of the open ports.
Nurses, blind to the patient’s grouping, recorded shoulder pain scores twice daily.
The results were conclusive. “Abdominal filling with saline at the end of laparoscopic surgery effectively evacuates residual CO2 thus preventing post-laparoscopic shoulder pain.”
In another study published by the Journal Archives of Surgery, a randomized, controlled trial was conducted at Taipei Veterans General Hospital over a period of eleven months. (3)
One hundred fifty-eight women undergoing laparoscopic surgery for benign gynecologic lesions were randomly assigned to 3 groups: 53 patients to the pulmonary recruitment maneuvers (PRM) group, 54 patients to the intraperitoneal normal saline infusion group, and 51 patients to the control group.
The pain each patient experienced was evaluated post-op at 12, 24, and 48 hours.
The research concluded that post-op shoulder pain was significantly reduced in the group that received the saline infusion compared with either the PRM or control groups.
Both the PRM and saline infusion approaches significantly reduced the frequency of upper abdominal pain compared with the control group.
Hence, while both pulmonary recruitment maneuvers and a saline infusion into the peritoneal cavity effectively reduced pain after laparoscopic surgery, the saline solution appeared to be better overall for both upper abdominal pain and shoulder pain.
My question to laparoscopic surgeons everywhere is this: “If you aren’t using a simple saline infusion or PRM as part of your standard of care, why the heck not?”
If you truly care about your patient’s comfort and ease of recovery, there seems to be no excuse whatsoever.
References
(1) Maneuvers to decrease laparoscopy-induced shoulder and upper abdominal pain: a randomized controlled study
(2) Prevention of Post-laparoscopic Shoulder Pain by Forced Evacuation of Residual CO2
(3) Pulmonary recruitment maneuver to reduce pain after laparoscopy: a meta-analysis of randomized controlled trials
Jason
I love your blog and its ability to simply deal with my nutritional deficiencies. However Where is the evidence that this technique routinely not being done? I’m having surgery coming up and am concerned. Also any newer papers other than 2010, I’d like to read up…
Jason
Sarah
Google laparoscopic surgery. Every single source I could find from all the medical websites talked about gas pain and how “to alleviate it”, which means that evacuating the gas post-op is not common. One source did say that “sometimes surgeons forcibly remove the gas”. But, no mention of how this is done was included. Also, one surgeon who does take the time and effort to do this for her patients here in Tampa where I live vouched for the fact that most surgeons don’t bother. She is apparently booked solid with patients clamoring to see her because she actually cares about her patients’ comfort!
heather
I was in the hospital a month ago to have my gallbladder removed, but at the last minute I decided to go the natural route and flush out the gallsstones via a cleanse. The doctors were very angry. They told me several times about all the gallbladder surgerys they do in that hospital. It was clearly the main surgery they did there. But my first cleanse was a complete success. Sarah, you should do a story on that subject.
Sarah
I have a post on the gall bladder flush. So glad you did that instead of surgery! Well done! https://www.thehealthyhomeeconomist.com/gallbladder-cleanse-to-flush-stones-and-avoid-surgery/
Shelley Sharp
I love your blog, truly you rock my world Sara! THank-you!
E
Wow Sarah you are amazing.
Annie
Thanks,
This is really interesting, and now makes sense.!
About 15 yrs ago I had a Liver biopsy , During this simple procedure done in the Hospital as a out patient,
I started to feel like someone was stabbing me in the right side of my Neck, my right arm was going numb, and it was becoming hard to breath.
I Asked the surgeon what was going on, but he did not want to answer me! But I kept asking.
He finally said, The needle touched your Diaphragm ! (he made a mistake)
The pain was awful, and after a month with the pain coming and going (I never took anything for pain).
I called the hospital to talk to that Dr,. At first he said he did not remember me, then when I said, I’m Not going to sue you, I just want to know when the pain will be gone.
Amazing how he then remembered me!
Btw I have PPO insurance, and it cost for me and my Husband, almost $1900.00 a month. If I gave my Santa Monica address, and not our mountain home address, it would cost over $2600.00 a month!!
That said, I do not want to hear Drs. complain there not getting paid what they want.
Drs. are jacking up the price of everything to get the money they expect. I’m not saying they do not deserve it.
Insurance companies are Greedy.
Ashley
Sarah, you are truly a Godsend! This coming Tuesday, I am having my 3rd surgery to remove an ovarian tumor. I have been absolutely dreading the gas pain in my shoulders. It was by far the worst part of recovery for both of my previous surgeries. I do not normally cry in pain and I have given birth without drugs. The gas pain made me cry. Back labor did not.
I have been searching online for remedies for the post op gas pains and nothing was coming up.
Then your article came to my inbox.
I’m going to discuss this with my doctor in pre-op. Hopefully he can make something happen before surgery.
Thanks so much again!
Sarah
So glad Ashley and I hope this information will prevent you having to suffer that horrible pain again!
Deborah
Thanks for this great advice, Sarah. Also, people having difficulties with gas after any type of surgery can consult with a professional homeopath who should be able to recommend remedies to help the body eliminate the gas.
Sarah
Great advice, however, many of these surgeries require at least a day or two in the hospital, so the unbearable pain has to be suffered until they can get home and get to a holistic doc for some relief. You can get the homeopathics ahead of time, but I don’t think the nurses in the recovery room would allow them 🙁 In the meantime, the narcotics are usually necessary which then presents an entirely new can of worms to recover from.
Kay
This is so interesting. I had laparoscopic surgery in 1983 with no postoperative pain except for the minor discomfort of the incision–and, of course, no need for narcotics. I wouldn’t be surprised if back then the standard of care was to remove the gas, and surgeons began abandoning the practice when cost-cutting became necessary.
Sarah
Or perhaps they didn’t use gas back then … it might have been discovered as a way to give the surgeon more room to work and to see better only more recently.
rca
I wonder whether most surgeons don’t do this so that their friends in Big Pharma can sell more pain pills?
Sarah
My guess is the insurance companies don’t cover the time/extra expense of saline solution to force the residual gas out of the patient’s abdomen. Any surgeon worth his/her “salt” would do it anyway, however, even if it came out of their pocket.
Jessica
Thank you for your research and writing on timely topics! I enjoy each of your articles and gain so much for myself, my family and sphere of influence.
This article is SO timely! I’m scheduled to have 2 abdominal hernias repaired surgerically this month! This info is very timely and I will be discussing it with the surgeon.
At least 2 close members of my family have had this same surgery and discuss the abdominal pain afterwards I’m sure caused by the gas not the surgery itself… Incredible to think it could have been minimalized!
I have an HMO provider- I always go in with lots of knowledge and understanding – from the Dr.s response and reaction I am my own well-versed advocate as it should be and sadly not.
Thanks again! I’ll be showing this to the surgeon …. I’d appreciate any pointers and advice in how I can approach the Dr.?
And honestly how would I know if my wishes/desires were met in the operating room (saline solution) until I got home?
Sarah
You will know if your wishes were met if you are not in excruciating pain and in need of narcotics when the anesthesia wears off. You have to put your trust in the doctor, which is why a conversation beforehand is very important so you feel comfortable. Just show the doctor the research and see what he/she says. And, if they say “I don’t do that”, then perhaps consider finding another surgeon.
If you want to be extra sure, have a friend or family member with you on the day of the surgery to advocate for you.
Trish
I used Arnica and NuxVomica before my surgery(I know, I know, you’re not suppose to do that!) and, it helped to dispel the gas. I had no pain. The nurses were so puzzled! They were all pushing on me because, I sounded like rice krispies, snap, crackle and pop!
Sarah
Wow, great tip. Thanks!
Kristy
Sarah, did you consult with any laparoscopic surgeons prior to publishing this article?
Sarah
Did you see my comment below about this? Answered already.