Prospective, monocentric, observationnal study. The primary objective of this study is to identify if presurgical child or/and parental anxiety is predictive of chronic postsurgical pain in abdominal or urologic ambulatory surgery.
The post surgical pain guidelines recommend to identify predictive factors, especially for vulnerable subjects. For children, there is few data about predictive factors of postoperative pain after ambulatory surgery. The objective of this study is to collect preoperative data (preoperative children's anxiety and parental anxiety) and postoperative data (postoperative pain measure: the day of surgery and 3 months after surgery) for children undergoing abdominal ou urologic ambulatory surgery, and to determine if there is a relationship between these data (Odds Ratio)
Study Type
OBSERVATIONAL
Enrollment
135
Centre Hospitalier de Saint-Brieuc
Saint-Brieuc, France
RECRUITINGChildren's preoperative anxiety
\- For children younger than 12 : mYPAS (the Modified Yale Preoperative Anxiety Scale). If the score is less than 24 : quiet child. If the score is greater than 24 : anxious child \- For children older than 12 : anxiety visual analog scale (VAS) From 0 (better) to 10 (worse)
Time frame: Preoperative : day of surgery
Parents' preoperative anxiety
anxiety visual analog scale (VAS) From 0 (better) to 10 (worse). More than 3/10 means "anxious"
Time frame: Preoperative: day of surgery
children's pain
* for children younger than 6: Evendol scale. From 0 (better) to 15 (worse) * for children older than 6: anxiety visual analog scale (VAS) From 0 (better) to 10 (worse).
Time frame: postoperative: day of surgery
Chronic postsurgical pain in children
For all children, score PPMP (Postoperative Pain Measure for Parents) From 0 (better) to 10 (worse)
Time frame: 3 months after surgery
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