%0 Journal Article %T Clinical guidelines on perioperative management strategies for enhanced recovery after lung surgery %A Alan D. L. Sihoe %A Andrea Droghetti %A Anthony M. H. Ho %A Antonio DĄŻAndrilli %A Calvin Ng %A Camilla Vanni %A Chengchu Zhu %A Chun Chen %A Di Ge %A Dongchun Ma %A Erino A. Rendina %A Fenglei Yu %A Gening Jiang %A Giulio Maurizi %A Guendalina Graffigna %A Guillermo Martinez %A Guoguang Shao %A Guowei Che %A Haitao Ma %A Hiran C. Fernando %A Hui Li %A Hui Tian %A Jacopo Vannucci %A Jian Hu %A Jianfei Shen %A Kaican Cai %A Kevin Phan %A Kun Qiao %A Lanjun Zhang %A Liang Chen %A Luca Voltolini %A Lunxu Liu %A Majed Refai %A Paolo Albino Ferrari %A Peng Zhang %A Qingchen Wu %A Roberto Crisci %A Serena Barello %A Shanqing Li %A Shidong Xu %A Shugeng Gao %A Song Zhao %A Wenjie Jiao %A Xiangning Fu %A Xiaofei Li %A Xiuyi Zhi %A Yunchao Huang %J SCIE-indexed Journal %D 2019 %R 10.21037/tlcr.2019.12.25 %X The concept of enhanced recovery after surgery (ERAS) was first developed in Denmark in 1997 by Dr. Kehlet (1). ERAS is designed to optimize perioperative management, improve patient prognosis, reduce complications, shorten hospital stay, and lower cost (2-5). In recent years, this multi-disciplinary and multi-modal perioperative rehabilitation concept has been widely applied in open and endoscopic procedures including colorectal surgery (6,7), gynecological surgery (8,9), liver surgery (10,11), breast surgery (12,13), urologic surgery (14,15), and spinal surgery (16-18) %U http://tlcr.amegroups.com/article/view/34349/23763