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Oral choline supplementation for postoperative pain.

British journal of anaesthesia
August 1, 2013
N Sidhu et al. (9 authors)
Journal ArticleRandomized Controlled TrialResearch Support, N.I.H., ExtramuralHuman StudyClinical
Study Details

Study Goal

The researchers aimed to determine whether oral choline supplementation with lecithin could effectively reduce pain and inflammation after gynecological surgery.

Results Summary

Oral lecithin supplementation resulted in a small but statistically significant increase in plasma choline, but it did not reduce TNF levels or pain reports compared to placebo. No adverse effects were reported.

Population

Sixty women undergoing open gynecological surgery.

Effective Dosage

20 g of lecithin before surgery.

Duration

Perioperative period (exact duration not specified).

Interactions

None mentioned.

Extracted Claims (8)
InterventionDirectionEndpointPopulationDosageImpactClaim #
nicotine
decrease
post-surgical pain
clinical and preclinical studies
-
reduce
#1
choline
decrease
pain
animal studies
-
is anti-nociceptive
#2
oral choline supplementation with lecithin
increase
plasma choline concentration
women having open gynaecological surgery
small
resulted in a small but statistically significant increase
#3
oral choline supplementation with lecithin
no change
plasma tumour necrosis factor (TNF)
women having open gynaecological surgery
-
was not decreased
#4
oral choline supplementation with lecithin
no change
pain report
women having open gynaecological surgery
-
was not different
#5
oral supplementation with lecithin
increase
plasma choline
perioperative period
small
resulted in very slow absorption and thus only a small increase
#6
oral supplementation with lecithin
decrease
TNF
-
-
was inadequate to reduce
#7
oral supplementation with lecithin
no change
pain reduction
-
-
failure to demonstrate efficacy in
#8
Abstract

BACKGROUND: Activation of nicotinic receptors with nicotine has been shown to reduce post-surgical pain in clinical and preclinical studies. Choline is a selective agonist at α7-type nicotinic receptors that does not have addictive or sympathetic activating properties. It is anti-nociceptive in animal studies. We conducted a double-blind randomized trial of oral choline supplementation with lecithin to aid in the treatment of pain after gynaecological surgery. METHODS: Sixty women having open gynaecological surgery were randomly assigned to receive 20 g of lecithin before surgery or placebo. Plasma choline concentration and tumour necrosis factor (TNF) were measured. Pain report was the primary outcome measure. RESULTS: We achieved a small but statistically significant increase in choline after surgery with oral supplementation. Plasma TNF was not decreased and pain report was not different between groups at rest or with movement. There were no adverse effects of treatment. CONCLUSIONS: Oral supplementation with lecithin during the perioperative period resulted in very slow absorption and thus only a small increase in plasma choline was achieved. This concentration was inadequate to reduce TNF as has been shown in other studies. The absence of an anti-inflammatory effect was likely related to our failure to demonstrate efficacy in pain reduction.

Medical Subject Headings (MeSH)
Administration, OralAdolescentAdultCholineDietary SupplementsDouble-Blind MethodFemaleGynecologic Surgical ProceduresHumansLecithinsLipotropic AgentsMiddle AgedPain MeasurementPain, PostoperativePilot ProjectsTumor Necrosis Factor-alphaYoung Adult
Study Links
Quality Scores
Safety90
Efficacy30/10
Quality75/10
Citation Metrics
Total Citations7
Citations/Year0.6
Relative Citation Ratio0.27
NIH Percentile14%
Research Impact Scores
APT Score0.25
Weight Score1.36
Normalized Score0.63
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