Best practice & research. Clinical anaesthesiology
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Hypothermia is common during anaesthesia and surgery owing to anaesthetic-induced inhibition of thermoregulatory control. Perioperative hypothermia is associated with numerous complications. However, for certain patient populations, and under specific clinical conditions, hypothermia can provide substantial benefits. ⋯ Mild hypothermia has been shown to improve outcome after cardiac arrest in humans. Randomized trials are in progress to evaluate the potential benefits of mild hypothermia during aneurysm clipping and after stroke or acute myocardial infraction. However, as hypothermia can cause unwanted side-effects, further research is needed to better quantify the risks and benefits of therapeutic hypothermia.
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Best Pract Res Clin Anaesthesiol · Dec 2003
ReviewPerioperative hypothermia in the high-risk surgical patient.
Perioperative hypothermia is common in high-risk surgical patients. Anaesthesia impairs central thermoregulation, allowing re-distribution of body heat. Cool ambient temperatures and high-volume fluid administration accelerate loss of heat to the environment. ⋯ The most effective means of preventing perioperative hypothermia is active pre-warming. High ambient temperatures, warmed intravenous fluids and active cutaneous warming are useful intra-operatively, while active cutaneous warming and intravenous pethidine abolish post-operative shivering. Proper thermal management may reduce complications and improve the outcome in high-risk surgical patients.
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Fever occurs when pyrogenic stimulation activates thermal control centres. Fever is common during the perioperative period, but rare during anaesthesia. Although only a limited number of studies are available to explain how anaesthesia affects fever, general anaesthesia seems to inhibit fever by decreasing the thermoregulatory-response thresholds to cold. ⋯ Accordingly, this fever might be diminished in patients who receive opioids for pain treatment. Post-operative fever is a normal thermoregulatory response usually of non-infectious aetiology. Fever may be important in the host defence mechanisms and should not be routinely treated lest the associated risks exceed the benefits.
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Anaesthesia alters normal thermoregulatory control of the body, usually leading to perioperative hypothermia. Hypothermia is associated with a large number of serious complications. To assess perianaesthetic hypothermia, core temperature should be monitored vigorously. ⋯ Intravenous fluid warming is also helpful when large volumes are required. In some patients, induction of mild therapeutic hypothermia may become an issue for the future. Recent studies indicate that patients suffering from neurological disease may profit from rapid core cooling.
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Best Pract Res Clin Anaesthesiol · Dec 2003
ReviewConsequences of inadvertent perioperative hypothermia.
Perioperative hypothermia triples the incidence of adverse myocardial outcomes in high-risk patients. Mild hypothermia significantly increases blood loss and augments allogeneic transfusion requirement, but the molecular pathophysiology of this effect remains to be elucidated. ⋯ Mild perioperative hypothermia changes the kinetics and action of various anaesthetic and paralysing agents, increases thermal discomfort, and is associated with delayed post-anaesthetic recovery. Finally, mild core hypothermia influences pulse oximetry monitoring and various electrophysiological indices of the nervous system, with questionable clinical significance, as yet.