TY -的T1 -肺resectio后的生活质量n is not associated with functional objective measures JF - European Respiratory Journal JO - Eur Respir J SP - 283 LP - 285 DO - 10.1183/09031936.00199212 VL - 42 IS - 1 AU - Pompili, Cecilia AU - Brunelli, Alessandro Y1 - 2013/07/01 UR - //www.qdcxjkg.com/content/42/1/283.abstract N2 - To the Editor:Patient and physician perspectives about surgical risk may differ. Physicians are mostly focused on objective end-points (i.e. mortality and survival), whereas most patients are worried about permanent physical and emotional disability resulting from the operation [1]. Can objective clinical information be used to predict patient-reported health status?In the attempt to respond to this question, we studied 221 consecutive patients submitted to major anatomic pulmonary resections (204 lobectomy and 17 pneumonectomy) during a 36-month period. All patients had a pre-operative measurement of maximum oxygen uptake (V′O2max), as a part of their routine pre-operative functional work-up, and a complete assessment of their pre-operative and post-operative (3 months after surgery) quality of life. All patients gave their consent for inclusion of their clinical data in our institutional database for clinical and scientific purposes and the Institutional Review Board of our hospital approved the study. No formal pre-admission or post-discharge physiotherapy or psychological support programmes were administered in this series. Neurological or psychotropic personal medications, if present, were generally resumed the day after surgery.Quality of life was assessed before and 3 months after the operation by the administration of Short Form 36v2 (SF36v2) survey [2], which … ER -