Impact of Therapeutic Alcohol Administration on Perioperative Quality of Life (QoL) and Fracture Healing in Patients with Alcohol Use Disorder Undergoing Surgery for Maxillofacial Trauma-A Randomized Pilot Trial

治疗性酒精给药对接受颌面创伤手术的酒精使用障碍患者围手术期生活质量和骨折愈合的影响——一项随机试点试验

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Abstract

Alcohol Use Disorder (AUD) is common among patients with maxillofacial trauma. Conventional perioperative care recommends complete abstinence. However, abrupt cessation can lead to Alcohol Withdrawal Syndrome (AWS), negatively impacting psychological well-being and compliance. This randomized controlled pilot study evaluated the effectiveness of Monitored Therapeutic Alcohol Administration (MTAA) in reducing perioperative stress and enhancing quality of life without impairing fracture healing. Twenty-four adult male patients with AUD and isolated facial fractures requiring surgery were enrolled. They were assigned to either an intervention group (n = 12) receiving MTAA-oral alcohol at 0.5 g/kg/day for two weeks-or a control group (n = 12) undergoing complete abstinence. Outcomes were assessed over six weeks, including stress (Zung Self-Rating Depression Scale), quality of life (Oral Health Impact Profile-14), soft tissue healing (Landry's Index), and hard tissue healing (Moed's Scale, serum osteocalcin). The MTAA group showed significantly reduced stress and improved quality of life (p < 0.001). Healing outcomes were comparable between groups, with no significant differences in soft tissue indices, osteocalcin levels, or radiographic scores. MTAA appears to be a safe and effective strategy to manage AWS-related distress and improve postoperative recovery, offering a practical alternative to strict abstinence in the surgical management of patients with AUD.

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