# Impact of different perioperative dexmedetomidine administration regimens on postoperative sleep quality in gastrointestinal tumor resection: a randomized controlled trial

**Authors:** Chengying Ji, Xiaodong Su, Chaohui Gao, Qijing Liu, Ying Liu, Qian Fu, Boxiong Gao, Jiayi Xie, Bokang Yang, Jinxiang Xie, Huping Song, Yatao Liu

PMC · DOI: 10.20452/wiitm.2025.17966 · 2025-07-04

## TL;DR

This study compares two ways of giving dexmedetomidine during surgery and finds that adding it to postoperative pain treatment improves sleep quality after gastrointestinal tumor surgery.

## Contribution

The study identifies a more effective administration strategy for dexmedetomidine to improve postoperative sleep quality in gastrointestinal tumor surgery.

## Key findings

- Postoperative DEX addition improved sleep quality on day 1 compared to intraoperative infusion.
- Group P had lower blood glucose and less blood loss during surgery.
- Sex and group assignment were significant predictors of sleep quality on postoperative day 1.

## Abstract

Perioperative sleep disorders constitute a recognized risk factor for multiple postoperative complications. Although dexmedetomidine (DEX) has been clinically employed to enhance perioperative sleep quality, its optimal administration protocol for postoperative sleep improvement remains undetermined.

The aim of this study was to comparatively evaluate the therapeutic effect of distinct perioperative DEX administration strategies on postoperative sleep quality in patients undergoing elective gastrointestinal tumor resection via laparoscopy.

A total of 48 patients undergoing laparoscopic gastrointestinal resection between September 2024 and January 2025 were enrolled and randomly allocated to the intraoperative continuous DEX infusion group (group I; n = 24) and the group with DEX added to postoperative intravenous analgesia (group P; n = 24) using a double-blind method. Sleep quality was assessed using the Numerical Rating Scale during the first 3 postoperative days. A comparative analysis of intergroup differences in postoperative sleep quality was performed.

Out of the 48 randomized participants, 47 were included in the analysis, as 1 patient from group P withdrew informed consent postoperatively. Baseline data were balanced between the 2 groups. In comparison with group I, on postoperative day 1, group P exhibited considerably higher sleep quality scores (P = 0.045), lower blood glucose levels at skin suture completion (P <⁠0.001), higher intraoperative norepinephrine doses (P <⁠0.001), and reduced intraoperative blood loss (P = 0.03). Multivariable linear regression identified group assignment (P = 0.03) and sex (P = 0.02) as significant predictors of sleep quality on postoperative day 1.

As compared with intraoperative continuous DEX infusion, addition of DEX to postoperative analgesia in laparoscopic gastrointestinal tumor surgery has better outcomes with regard to sleep quality on postoperative day 1. These findings suggest potential advantages of postoperative DEX administration in perioperative management.

## Linked entities

- **Chemicals:** dexmedetomidine (PubChem CID 5311068), norepinephrine (PubChem CID 951)

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** blood loss (MESH:D016063), sleep disorders (MESH:D012893), gastrointestinal tumor (MESH:D005770)
- **Chemicals:** DEX (MESH:D020927), glucose (MESH:D005947), norepinephrine (MESH:D009638)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Figures

3 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12329668/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12329668