IJSHR

International Journal of Science and Healthcare Research

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Review Article

Year: 2020 | Month: July-September | Volume: 5 | Issue: 3 | Pages: 319-326

Enhanced Recovery after Surgery (ERAS): Review Article

Maged MN1, Mohamed MN2, Lamia H.Shehata3

1Mazahmiya Hospital, Ministry of Health, Kingdom of Saudi Arabia, Department of ob/gyn,
2King Fahd Hospital, Ministry of Health, Kingdom of Saudi Arabia, Department of Surgery,
3Care National hospital , Department of Radiology.

Corresponding Author: Maged MN

ABSTRACT

Enhanced recovery after surgery (ERAS) is a multimodal convention applied towards perioperative patient consideration. Times programs are executed by a multidisciplinary group based on the patient, joining outpatient clinical staff, preoperative nurses, anesthesiologists, operative nurses, postoperative recuperation staff, floor inpatient nurses, dieticians, physical specialists, social workers, and surgeons. Starting investigations on perioperative consideration estimates concentrated on cardiovascular medical procedure. In this way, the improvement of the ERAS Study Group in 2001 concentrated on colorectal medical procedure and postoperative result measures. Today, ERAS conventions have been executed across numerous careful subspecialties including: bariatric, breast, plastic, cardiac, colorectal, esophageal, head and neck, hepatic, gynecologic, neurosurgical, orthopedic, pancreatic, thoracic, and urologic medical procedure. The objective of ERAS programs is to advance fast recuperation as evaluated by diminishing the length of hospital stay, complications and cost of specific careful interventions. In the setting of the narcotic crisis in America, there is additionally an expanding center around limiting perioperative opiate use. The motivation behind this audit is to think about ERAS conventions across careful subspecialties, concentrating on measured measurements of progress, and to give a reasonable and succinct synopsis of the writing with respect to current ERAS practices and achievement rates.

Keywords: (ERAS, Preoperative, Intraoperative, Postoperative)

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