Ahi Evran Medical Journal (Dec 2022)

Incidence of Inadvertent Perioperative Hypothermia in Pediatric Laparoscopic Surgery: a Prospective Observational Single-Center Study

  • Recai DAĞLI,
  • Ülgen ÇELTİK,
  • Fatma ÇELİK,
  • Zeynel Abidin ERBESLER,
  • Zeynep KÖYLÜ

DOI
https://doi.org/10.46332/aemj.1083413
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 6, no. 3
pp. 297 – 303

Abstract

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Purpose: The pediatric age group is a risk group for Inadvertent perioperative hypothermia (IPH) due to insufficient subcutane-ous adipose tissue and underdeveloped thermoregulatory responses. We aimed to determine the frequency of IPH in the pediatric age group undergoing laparoscopic surgery. Materials and Methods: The study is prospective observational. Pediatric patients (1-18 years old) who underwent laparoscopic surgery under general anesthesia were evaluated. The tympanic membrane temperature measurements of the patients (°C) were recorded before anesthesia induction (T0) and then every 15 minutes during the surgery. Results: A total of 100 patients were evaluated. The frequency of inadvertent perioperative hypothermia was detected as 13(13%). The frequency of IPH in elective surgery patients was higher than in emergency surgery (<0.001). IPH occurred in 11 of a total of 28(39.3%) patients during elective surgery. Age, body mass index, intravenous fluid volume, and insufflated CO2 volume of hypothermic patients were detected to be statistically significantly lower than the normothermic group. A significant statistical difference was detected between T0 (°C) of nor-mothermic and hypothermic patients (37.8±0.53 vs. 36.8±0.60, respectively, 95% CI, 37.6 to 37.8, P<0.001). In total, a decrease of approximately 0.7 °C in body temperature was observed in the first 30 minutes. Conclusion: IPH frequently develops during laparoscopic surgeries in the pediatric age group. The current temperature manage-ment practices and passive heating systems that we use do not seem adequate to provide protection from hypothermia.

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