Author:
Kurz Andrea MD,Sessler Daniel I.,Birnbauer Franz,Illievich Udo M.,Spiss Christian K.
Abstract
Background
Many clinicians now consider hypothermia indicated during neurosurgery. Active cooling often will be required to reach target temperatures < 34 degrees C sufficiently rapidly and nearly always will be required if the target temperature is 32 degrees C. However, the efficacy even of active cooling might be impaired by thermoregulatory vasoconstriction, which reduces cutaneous heat loss and constrains metabolic heat to the core thermal compartment. The authors therefore tested the hypothesis that the efficacy of active cooling is reduced by thermoregulatory vasoconstriction.
Methods
Patients undergoing neurosurgical procedures with hypothermia were anesthetized with either isoflurane/nitrous oxide (n = 13) or propofol/fentanyl (n = 13) anesthesia. All were cooled using a prototype forced-air cooling device until core temperature reached 32 degrees C. Core temperature was measured in the distal esophagus. Vasoconstriction was evaluated using forearm minus fingertip skin-temperature gradients. The core temperature triggering a gradient of 0 degree C identified the vasoconstriction threshold.
Results
In 6 of the 13 patients given isoflurane, vasoconstriction (skin-temperature gradient = 0 degrees C) occurred at a core temperature of 34.4 +/- 0.9 degree C, 1.7 +/- 0.58 h after induction of anesthesia. Similarly, in 7 of the 13 patients given propofol, vasoconstriction occurred at a core temperature of 34.5 +/- 0.9 degree C, 1.6 +/- 0.6 h after induction of anesthesia. In the remaining patients, vasodilation continued even at core temperatures of 32 degrees C. Core cooling rates were comparable in each anesthetic group. However, patients in whom vasodilation was maintained cooled fastest. Patients in whom vasoconstriction occurred required nearly an hour longer to reach core temperatures of 33 degrees C and 32 degrees C than did those in whom vasodilation was maintained (P < 0.01).
Conclusions
Vasoconstriction did not produce a full core temperature "plateau," because of the extreme microenvironment provided by forced-air cooling. However, it markedly decreased the rate at which hypothermia developed. The approximately 1-h delay in reaching core temperatures of 33 degrees C and 32 degrees C could be clinically important, depending on the target temperature and the time required to reach critical portions of the operation.
Publisher
Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)
Subject
Anesthesiology and Pain Medicine
Cited by
73 articles.
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