The impact of pre-operative mental health on outcomes of foot and ankle surgery: A scoping review
Haq, Ibrahim I ; Bhatia, Maneesh ; Arshad, Zaki
Haq, Ibrahim I
Bhatia, Maneesh
Arshad, Zaki
Abstract
Background: Evidence suggests that certain groups of orthopaedic patients have an increased prevalence of mental health disorders than the general population. This scoping review aims to evaluate the effect of pre-operative mental health on outcomes of foot and ankle surgery.
Methods: A literature search was performed in four databases. Studies investigating a relationship between preoperative mental health and postoperative patient reported outcome measures (PROMs), complications, readmissions or reoperations were included.
Results: Of the 19 studies investigating the effect of preoperative mental health on PROMs, 16 (84.2%) reported a significant relationship between poorer preoperative mental health and inferior postoperative PROMs. Poorer mental health was associated with an increased rate of complications, readmissions and/or reoperations in four studies.
Conclusions: Poorer preoperative mental health is associated with significantly inferior outcomes following foot and ankle surgery. Clinicians should evaluate mental health to stratify likely outcomes and aid in the management of patient expectations.
Level of evidence: Level IV: Scoping review of Level II-IV studies.
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Date
2023-11-08
Type
Article
Subject
Ankle, Anxiety, Depression, Foot, Mental health
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Citation
Arshad, Z., Haq, I. I., Martins, A., & Bhatia, M. (2023). The impact of pre-operative mental health on outcomes of foot and ankle surgery: A scoping review. Foot and ankle surgery : official journal of the European Society of Foot and Ankle Surgeons, S1268-7731(23)00201-1. Advance online publication. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.fas.2023.11.002
