Mild intraoperative hypothermia prolongs postanesthetic recovery
Autor: | E. Narzt, Elvine Marker, Heinz D. Tschernich, F. Lackner, Andrea Kurz, V. Goll, Rainer Lenhardt, Daniel I. Sessler |
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Rok vydání: | 1998 |
Předmět: |
Adult
Male medicine.medical_specialty Time Factors Hemodynamics Hypothermia Body Temperature Abdomen medicine Humans Prospective Studies Rewarming Intraoperative Complications Pain Postoperative business.industry Analgesia Patient-Controlled Thermoregulation Middle Aged Intraoperative hypothermia Surgery Anesthesiology and Pain Medicine Anesthesia Anesthetic Anesthesia Recovery Period Female medicine.symptom Complication business Hemodynamic instability medicine.drug |
Zdroj: | Anesthesiology. 87(6) |
ISSN: | 0003-3022 |
Popis: | Background Intraoperative hypothermia is common and persists for several hours after surgery. Hypothermia may prolong immediate recovery by augmenting anesthetic potency, delaying drug metabolism, producing hemodynamic instability, or depressing cognitive function. Accordingly, the authors tested the hypothesis that intraoperative hypothermia prolongs postoperative recovery. Methods Patients undergoing elective major abdominal surgery (n = 150) were anesthetized with isoflurane, nitrous oxide, and fentanyl. They were randomly assigned to routine thermal management (hypothermia) or extra warming (normothermia). Postoperative surgical pain was treated with patient-controlled analgesia. Fitness for discharge from the postanesthesia care unit was evaluated at 20-min intervals by investigators blinded to group assignment and postoperative core temperatures. Scoring was based on a modification of a previously published system that included activity, ventilation, consciousness, and hemodynamic responses. Patients were considered fit for discharge when they sustained a score of 80% (13 points) for at least two consecutive measurement periods. Results Morphometric characteristics and anesthetic management were similar in each group. Final intraoperative core temperatures differed by approximately 2 degrees C: 34.8 +/- 0.6 versus 36.7 +/- 0.6 degrees C (mean +/- SD, P < 0.001). Postoperative pain scores and postoperative use of patient-controlled opioid were similar. Hypothermic patients required approximately 40 min longer (94 +/- 65 vs. 53 +/- 36 min) to reach fitness for discharge, even when return to normothermia was not a criterion (P < 0.001). Duration of recovery in the two groups differed by approximately 90 min when a core temperature >36 degrees C was also required (P < 0.001). Conclusion Maintaining core normothermia decreases the duration of postanesthetic recovery and may, therefore, reduce costs of care. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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