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A simple, safe, and effective way of reducing complications of surgery
Perioperative hypothermia can have a wide range of
underappreciated, detrimental effects. These include increased rates of wound infection, morbid cardiac events, blood loss, and length of
stay in both recovery and hospital. Maintaining core temperature at or
above 36°C can be beneficial for the patient and cost effective.
Frank et al studied high risk cardiac patients undergoing thoracic,
abdominal, and vascular surgery.1 Patients randomised to
routine thermal care were, on average, 1.3°C cooler than patients warmed more aggressively. Despite this small difference the incidence of perioperative morbid cardiac events, assessed in a double blind fashion, was 300% higher in the cooler group. Frank et al thought that
this may be the a consequence of the dramatic increase in noradrenaline
release seen in even mild hypothermia.
It has also been said that the increase in noradrenaline may contribute
to the higher number of wound infections seen in hypothermic patients.
A randomised study of patients undergoing colorectal surgery showed
that 1.9°C hypothermia resulted in an infection rate of 19% compared
with 6% in the normothermic group.2
The same study also showed that postoperatively the hypothermic group
remained, on average, 2.6 days longer in hospital. Interestingly, even
those hypothermic patients who did not have wound infections were
discharged two days later. The surgeons participating in discharging
the patients and assessing their wounds were unaware of the thermal management.
Efficiency of the operating theatre and costs can be affected adversely
by delayed discharge of patients from recovery. In a blinded,
randomised study of 150 patients undergoing major elective abdominal
surgery it was found that the hypothermic patients (34.8 ±0.6°C)
were fit to be discharged an average of 40 minutes later than the
normothermic group (36.7 ±0.6°C).3 This decision was made on the basis of a validated scoring. The delay would have been 90 minutes had a temperature of equal to or more than 36°C been part of
the criteria for discharging patients.
The clinical effect of hypothermia on blood loss was shown in a
randomised, controlled study of 60 patients undergoing primary total
hip replacement. The hypothermic group, whose mean postoperative temperature was 1.6°C lower than that of the normothermic group, lost
on average 500 ml or 30% more blood.4 When using
predetermined targets for packed cell volumes, this translated into
seven of the hypothemic group receiving transfusions, as against one
out of 30 in the normothermic group. Although not a primary end point, the increased blood loss was also noted in the study by Kurz et al.2
Such an outcome is unsurprising given that hypothermia produces a
multifactorial coagulopathy involving defective thromboxane A2 release,
alterations in platelet function, and inhibition of the coagulation
cascade. These effects can often be overlooked as most widely available
tests of coagulation are compensated by temperature. When prothrombin
times are measured at different temperatures a 3°C drop can increase
the value by approximately 10%.5
A recent editorial in the BMJ said that a haemovigilance
programme is overdue in the United Kingdom, with mandatory local participation; new funds to pay for training, innovation, and audit;
removal of incentives to supply and use blood; and an independent body
to administer the programme.6 On this evidence it seems that aggressive perioperative warming policies should be considered as
a means of reducing the need for allogenic blood transfusion.
Urology patients, particularly those presenting for transurethral
prostatectomy, are at a relatively high risk of hypothermia and its
consequences. They tend to be elderly and as such at higher risk of
perioperative complications.7 w1 The use of
irrigation fluids can cause significant fluid shiftsw2 and
the development of the transurethral prostatectomy
syndrome,8 which may aggravate any problems secondary to
hypothermia. If inadequately warmed the fluids can exacerbate drops in
temperature.9 w3 Furthermore, many of these
operations are carried out under regional anaesthesia, which has been
shown to attenuate the thermogenic response to
hypothermia,10 thereby prolonging the adverse effects.
In 1984 Carpenter noted that hypothermia during transurethral
prostatectomy has received relatively little attention in the urology
literature, and this is still the case.11 One study, which
looked at the consequences of hypothermia in these patients, showed a
clinically significant, adverse, haemodynamic response in those
patients who were not warmed aggressively.12
Hypothermia can be reduced by the use of forced air warming blankets,
irrigation fluid that has been warmed in a heating cabinet, and by
warming intravenous fluid.12 Blankets and fluid warmers are likely to present the largest ongoing costs; they currently cost
approximately £11 ($18; Perioperative warming can be cost effective and reduce a
patient's discomfort by cutting the incidence of wound infections, length of stay in hospital, and shivering. It may also reduce the rate
of allogenic blood transfusions and its associated risks. Given these
end points it should now be possible to set up a randomised controlled
trial to encompass all the possible benefits of maintaining perioperative normothermia.
Centre for Anaesthesia, Middlesex Hospital, London W1T 3AA
(drmarkharper{at}hotmail.com) (mcnic{at}globalnet.com) Lister Hospital, Stevenage, Hertfordshire SG1 4AB
16) each. In our institution operating theatres cost £750 an hour to run, and a unit of packed red blood cells costs £120. A saving of one hour and three units of blood could
perhaps cover the cost of warming 50 patients.
Thomas McNicholas
S Gowrie-Mohan
Footnotes
Competing interests: None declared.
Extra references appear on
bmj.com
| 1. | Frank SM, Fleisher LA, Breslow MJ, Higgins MS, Olson KF, Kelly S, et al. Perioperative maintenance of normothermia reduces the incidence of morbid cardiac events. A randomized clinical trial. JAMA 1997; 277: 1127-1134[Abstract]. |
| 2. |
Kurz A, Sessler DI, Lenhardt R.
Perioperative normothermia to reduce the incidence of surgical-wound infection and shorten hospitalization. Study of wound infection and temperature group.
N Engl J Med
1996;
334:
1209-1215 |
| 3. | Lenhardt R, Marker E, Goll V, Tschernich H, Kurz A, Sessler DI, et al. Mild intraoperative hypothermia prolongs postanesthetic recovery. Anesthesiology 1997; 87: 1318-1323[CrossRef][ISI][Medline]. |
| 4. | Schmied H, Kurz A, Sessler DI, Kozek S, Reiter A. Mild hypothermia increases blood loss and transfusion requirements during total hip arthroplasty. Lancet 1996; 347: 289-292[CrossRef][ISI][Medline]. |
| 5. | Rohrer MJ, Natale AM. Effect of hypothermia on the coagulation cascade. Crit Care Med. 1992; 20: 1402-1405[ISI][Medline]. |
| 6. |
Mortimer PP.
Making blood safer.
BMJ
2002;
325:
400-401 |
| 7. |
Jin F, Chung F.
Minimizing perioperative adverse events in the elderly.
Br J Anaesth
2001;
87:
608-624 |
| 8. | Gravenstein D. Transurethral resection of the prostate (TURP) syndrome: a review of the pathophysiology and management. Anesth Analg 1997; 84: 438-446[Medline]. |
| 9. | Rawstron RE, Walton JK. Body temperature changes during transurethral prostatectomy. Anaesth Intensive Care 1981; 9: 43-46[Medline]. |
| 10. | Carli F, Kulkarni P, Webster JD, MacDonald IA. Post-surgery epidural blockade with local anaesthetics attenuates the catecholamine and thermogenic response to perioperative hypothermia. Acta Anaesthesiol Scand 1995; 39: 1041-1047[Medline]. |
| 11. | Carpenter AA. Hypothermia during transurethral resection of prostate. Urology 1984; 23: 122-124[Medline]. |
| 12. | Evans JW, Singer M, Coppinger SW, Macartney N, Walker JM, Milroy EJ. Cardiovascular performance and core temperature during transurethral prostatectomy. J Urol 1994; 152: 2025-2029[ISI][Medline]. |
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