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Case study: The effect of anaesthetic room pre-warming on the incidence of inadvertent perioperative hypothermia: a quality improvement project
Authors: Rona J, University of Sheffield Medical School; Andrzejowski J, Wiles M, Royal Hallamshire Hospital, Sheffield.
Inadvertent perioperative hypothermia (IPH) is defined as a core body temperature less than 36°C.2 Both regional and general anaesthesia can result in IPH, with the risk increasing for patients with a high ASA grade, undergoing emergency surgery or low BMI.3
IPH is a serious complication of surgery which has been linked to infections, shivering, bleeding, adverse cardiac events and changes to drug metabolism.3 NICE guidelines recommend that all patients are warmed for a minimum of 30 minutes before anaesthesia is administered,4 however it has been demonstrated that pre-warming for just 10 minutes is effective at reducing hypothermia rates.5
A recent quality improvement study that sought to determine whether pre-warming patients in the anaesthetic room had a positive effect on the incidence of postoperative hypothermia. Show that with an average duration of pre-induction warming of 13 minutes, hypothermia rates in the post-anaesthesia care unit (PACU) reduced by 27.5%.1
References
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