The Effect of Psychiatric History on Pain and Related Outcomes Among Living Kidney Donors.

dc.contributor.author

Fox, Kristen R

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Gulin, Shaina L

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Bruschwein, Heather M

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Rose, Terra

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Burker, Eileen J

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Kozlowski, Tomasz

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Loiselle, Marci M

dc.date.accessioned

2021-07-01T16:33:50Z

dc.date.available

2021-07-01T16:33:50Z

dc.date.issued

2021-06

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2021-07-01T16:33:49Z

dc.description.abstract

Introduction

Living donor transplantation of kidneys accounts for one quarter of transplants performed in the United States. Careful screening of psychiatric history is a standard part of the donor evaluation. Little is known about the impact of psychiatric history on post-donation course and pain experience.

Research question

This study investigated whether psychiatric history was associated with pain and related outcomes among living kidney donors.

Design

A retrospective medical record review was conducted of 75 living kidney donors who underwent laparoscopic donor nephrectomy. All donor candidates completed a psychological evaluation and were approved for donation by a multidisciplinary committee. History of psychiatric diagnosis and psychiatric medication use were obtained from donors' psychological evaluation reports. Data on pain and related outcomes (ie, history of prescribed pain medication, post-donation pain, opioid use, length of hospital stay, post-donation emergency department visits), as well as demographic and donation-related characteristics were also abstracted from medical records.

Results

Psychiatric history, including current or historical psychiatric diagnosis or psychiatric medication use, in living kidney donors who were evaluated and approved for donation by a transplant psychologist was not associated with greater perceived pain, greater use of opioid pain medication in the post-operative period, longer hospital stays, or more frequent post-donation emergency department visits.

Discussion

The findings demonstrate that carefully screened donors with a psychiatric history have comparable pain-related outcomes as donors without a psychiatric history. This study highlights the importance of the pre-donation psychological evaluation in promoting positive postdonation outcomes through careful selection of donor candidates.
dc.identifier.issn

1526-9248

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2164-6708

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https://hdl.handle.net/10161/23420

dc.language

eng

dc.publisher

SAGE Publications

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Progress in transplantation (Aliso Viejo, Calif.)

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10.1177/15269248211002809

dc.subject

living kidney donation

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opioid use

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pain

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psychiatric history

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psychological evaluation

dc.title

The Effect of Psychiatric History on Pain and Related Outcomes Among Living Kidney Donors.

dc.type

Journal article

duke.contributor.orcid

Loiselle, Marci M|0000-0002-7284-6342

pubs.begin-page

108

pubs.end-page

116

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2

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School of Medicine

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Psychiatry & Behavioral Sciences, Behavioral Medicine

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Duke

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Psychiatry & Behavioral Sciences

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Clinical Science Departments

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Published

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31

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