Pediatric surgery international
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Pediatr. Surg. Int. · Sep 1998
Fentanyl analgesia increases the incidence of postoperative hypothermia in neonates.
Postoperative hypothermia remains a clinical problem in neonates undergoing surgery. Intraoperative analgesia can blunt the metabolic and hormonal response to operative stress in neonates. However, its effects on heat production and thermoregulation are not known. ⋯ The drop in temperature between preoperative and initial postoperative values was significantly greater in patients who received fentanyl intraoperatively (median drop 0.8 degreesC, range 0.6 - 2.4) when compared with patients who received morphine (P = 0.02) or epidural bupivacaine (P = 0.01). These data suggest that intraoperative fentanyl modulates the postoperative body temperature in neonates. We hypothesise that fentanyl blocks metabolic heat production, which results in a reduction in postoperative body temperature.