Volume 82, Issue 1 , Pages 73-79, January 2001
Preoperative expectations and postoperative quality of life in liver transplant survivors☆☆☆
Abstract
Holzner B, Kemmler G, Kopp M, Dachs E, Kaserbacher R, Spechtenhauser B, Vogel W, Sperner-Unterweger B. Preoperative expectations and postoperative quality of life in liver transplant survivors. Arch Phys Med Rehabil 2001;82:73-9. Objective: To assess normalization in the lives of liver transplant patients and the impact of preoperative expectations on postoperative quality of life (QOL). Design: A semistructured interview, 2 QOL questionnaires, and chart reviews of medical histories. Setting: Internal medicine department at Innsbruck university hospital, Austria. Participants: Fifty-five patients (32 men, 23 women) with liver transplants. Interventions: The Sickness Impact Profile (SIP) and Functional Assessment of Cancer Therapy-General. Results: Patients' preoperative expectations of a normal life style posttransplantation were predominantly optimistic (60%), but postoperatively only 40% thought that their expectations had been realized. The patients' SIP values showed significant impairments in nearly every area of life when compared with the values of a healthy control group. Only “complications during the hospitalized phase” had a statistically significant impact among the sociodemographic and clinical parameters on postoperative QOL. The lowest QOL scores were found among patients whose expectations of a return to normal life style had not been realized. Conclusion: Unmet life-style expectations after liver transplantation may lead to increased stress, which affects QOL long term. This finding is of clinical relevance; therapeutic measures, particularly professional pretransplant counseling, are indicated. © 2001 by the American Congress of Rehabilitation Medicine and the American Academy of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation
Keywords: Liver transplantation, Quality of life, Rehabilitation, Treatment outcome
☆ No commercial party having a direct financial interest in the results of the research supporting this article has or will confer a benefit upon the authors or upon any organization with which the authors are associated.
☆☆ Reprint requests to Bernhard Holzner, PhD, Innsbruck University Hospital, Dept of Biological Psychiatry, Anichstr 35, A-6020 Innsbruck, Austria, e-mail: Bernhard.Holzner@uibk.ac.at.
PII: S0003-9993(01)47383-7
doi:10.1053/apmr.2001.19013
© 2001 American Congress of Rehabilitation Medicine and the American Academy of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
Volume 82, Issue 1 , Pages 73-79, January 2001
