1. Novel Technology to Capture Objective Data from Patients' Recovery from Laparoscopic Endometriosis Surgery.
- Author
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Loring, Megan, Kabelac, Zachary, Munir, Usman, Yue, Shichao, Ephraim, Hannah Y., Rahul, Hariharan, Isaacson, Keith B., Griffith, Linda G., and Katabi, Dina
- Abstract
Study Objective: To assess the feasibility of a noncontact radio sensor as an objective measurement tool to study postoperative recovery from endometriosis surgery.Design: Prospective cohort pilot study.Setting: Center for minimally invasive gynecologic surgery at an academically affiliated community hospital in conjunction with in-home monitoring.Patients: Patients aged above 18 years who sleep independently and were scheduled to have laparoscopy for the diagnosis and treatment of suspected endometriosis.Interventions: A wireless, noncontact sensor, Emerald, was installed in the subjects' home and used to capture physiologic signals without body contact. The device captured objective data about the patients' movement and sleep in their home for 5 weeks before surgery and approximately 5 weeks postoperatively. The subjects were concurrently asked to complete a daily pain assessment using a numeric rating scale and a free text survey about their daily symptoms.Measurements and Main Results: Three women aged 23 years to 39 years and with mild to moderate endometriosis participated in the study. Emerald-derived sleep and wake times were contextualized and corroborated by select participant comments from retrospective surveys. In addition, self-reported pain levels and 1 sleep variable, sleep onset to deep sleep time, showed a significant (p <.01), positive correlation with next-day-pain scores in all 3 subjects: r = 0.45, 0.50, and 0.55. In other words, the longer it took the subject to go from sleep onset to deep sleep, the higher their pain score the following day.Conclusion: A patient's experience with pain is challenging to meaningfully quantify. This study highlights Emerald's unique ability to capture objective data in both preoperative functioning and postoperative recovery in an endometriosis population. The utility of this uniquely objective data for the clinician-patient relationship is just beginning to be explored. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2021
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