Anaesthesia
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Multicenter Study
Postoperative hypothermia and patient outcomes after major elective non-cardiac surgery.
Using a multicentre adult patient database from Australia and New Zealand, we obtained the lowest and highest temperature in the first 24 h after admission to the intensive care unit after elective non-cardiac surgery. Hypothermia was defined as core temperature < 36 °C; transient hypothermia as a temperature < 36 °C that was corrected within 24 h, and persistent hypothermia as hypothermia not corrected within 24 h. ⋯ Hypothermia occurred in 23,165 (46%) patients, was transient in 22,810 (45%), and was persistent in 608 (1.2%) patients. On multivariate analysis, neither transient (OR = 1.07, 95% CI 0.96-1.20) nor persistent (OR = 1.50. 95% CI 0.96-2.33) hypothermia was independently associated with increased hospital mortality.
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Suctioning is essential in managing tracheal tubes, but also has drawbacks. Using a bench model, we demonstrated the extent and time course of pressure changes during suctioning, examined their relationship with tracheal tube and catheter diameters and assessed the effects of artificial 'sputum' and of compensatory gas flow in the system. We suctioned at -20 kPa (-150 mmHg) and -80 kPa (-600 mmHg) using three different sized catheters and a 5.9-mm diameter bronchoscope through tracheal tubes ranging from 6.5 mm to 9.0 mm in diameter. ⋯ Using a closed system with continuous positive airway pressure and 155 l.min(-1) compensatory gas flow attenuated the pressure changes generated both with a 4.0-mm catheter (p = 0.0005) and on bronchoscopic suctioning (p = 0.0078). The time taken to reach 50% of minimum pressure was always less than 1 s. The use of high compensatory flows during suctioning merits clinical evaluation.