Title: Perioperative Heat Balance
1Perioperative Heat Balance
- KyungHee Medical Center
- Department of Anesthesiology
- Shin Kwang Il
2Hypothermia
- Anesthesia and surgery ? Thermal perturbation
- Anesthesia impair thermoregulatory control
- A cool operating room
- Surgery promote excessive heat loss
- Inhibition of thermoregulatory defenses than cold
exposure per se - Core hypothermia
- Distribution of body heat than heat production
and heat loss
31. Heat Production and Distribution
- Tissue temperature - heat content of tissue about
0.83 kcal/kg/ºc - Heat production
- Proportion to metabolic rates
- Energy generation by a chemical reation
- Substrates glucose, protein and fat
- Products carbon dioxide and water
- Glucose 4.1kcal/kg
- Protein 4.1kcal/kg
- Fat 9.3kcal/kg
41. Heat Production and Distribution
- Thermal compartment
- Core thermal compartment
- Well-perfused tissue
- Fast distribution of heat
- Consist of the trunk and head
- Comprises 5060 of the body mass
- Peripheral thermal compartment
- Consist of arms and legs
- 24 ? less than core temperature
- Core-to-peripheral temperature gradients
- in warm or vasodilation - lower
- in vasoconstriction higher
51. Heat Production and Distribution
- Heat flow and generation
- Core tissue rapid distribution of heat
- Peripheral tissue slow distribution of heat
- Core-to-peripheral flow of heat
- Mediated by blood-borne convection and conduction
- Convective component
- large and rapid flow of heat
- big axial vessels
- Conductive component
- slower radial flow of heat
- warm tissue ? cooler tissue
61. Heat Production and Distribution
- Convective component
- Large and relative rapid flow of heat
- by the big axial vessels
- by peripheral blood flow
- Heat exchange between adjacent AV
- Core-to-peripheral temperature gradient
- Conductive component
- Slower radial flow of heat by the diffusion
coefficient - Warm tissue ? cooler tissue
- Insulation fat (3X) gt muscle
71. Heat Production and Distribution
- Deposition of heat into peripheral tissue
- Augmented by local tissue metabolism and
diminished regional cutaneous heat loss - Dissipate all metabolic heat ? maintain thermal
steady state - About 95 of this heat ? skin surface
- Remaining ? lost via the respiratory track
- In the absence of sweating
- 10 of cutaneous heat loss is evaporative in
adults - Sweating 10 times in dry state
- The upper chest and face are most sensitive to
temp. - Heat loss is roughly propotional to surface area
over the entire body
82. General Anesthesia
- General anesthesia 13 hypothermic
- Depend on the type and dose of anesthesia
- amount of surgical exposure
- ambient temperature
- A characteristic pattern of Hypothermia
- 1st hour core temp. - 11.5 ? decrease
- 23 hours slower, linear decrease
- Finally a plateau phase - constant core temp.
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101) Redistribution
- Core thermal compartment
- Well-perfused tissue of the trunk and head
relatively high temp. - Peripheral tissue
- 24 ? cooler than the trunk and head
- Normal core-to-peripheral temp. gradient
- Maintained by the tonic thermoregulatory
- vasoconstriction of A-V shunts in fingers
and toes
111) Redistribution
- (1) Mechanism
- General anesthesia vasodilation via 2
mechanisms - Reduces the vasoconstriction threshold
- Cause direct(peripheral) vasodilation(anesthetics)
- This internal redistribution of body heat
- Decrease core temp
- Increase peripheral temp
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131) Redistribution
- (1) Mechanism
- A quantitative study(in volunteers)
- After 1h of anesthesia
- Core temp decreased 1.6 ºc
- redistribution 81
- Subsequent 2h of anestheia
- Core temp decreased on additional 1.1 ºc
- redistribution only 43
- During the first 3h of anesthesia
- Redistribution contributed 65 to the total
decrease in core temperature - Core-to-peripheral redistribution - primary cause
of hypothermia during initial phase of anesthesia
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151) Redistribution
- (2) Major factors influencing magnitude
- The extent of redistribution hypothermia
- Patient's initial body heat content
- Core temperature normal even in warm environ.
- Redistribution magnitude is limited when
peripheral and core temp. are similar - Body morphology
- Obese pts lt normal weight pt
- The amount of redistribution
- Systemic heat loss, cool or large surgical
incision
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172) Linear Phase
- 2nd portion of hypothermic curve
- Slow, linear decrease core temp.
- Heat loss exceed metabolic heat production
- Metabolic rate 1540 reduce by general Anes.
- Cutaneous heat loss
- Radiation, conduction, convection, evaporation
- Conductive loss - linearly
- Infants and children, large op. - great loss
- Warm environment - reduced hypothermia
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192) Linear Phase
- (1) Radiation
- Usually contribute most
- Transfer of heat via photons
- The amount of heat loss by radiation a
function of the emissivity of the two surface - Emissivity defines an object's ability to absorb
and emit heat. - Black bodies absorb and emit heat perfectly
- an emissivity of one,
mirror 0 - Human skin (all colors) near 0.95 for infrared
light.
202) Linear Phase
- (2) Conduction and convection
- Conduction direct transfer of heat
- Proportional to surface temp. difference and
insulation. - Convection facilitated (or forced) conduction.
- Proportional to square root of air velocity
- Second most important source of heat loss during
anesthesia and surgery - Dominant laminar flow of units
212) Linear Phase
- (3) Evaporation
- Heat of vaporization of water 0.58 kcal/g
- Skin 5 of basal metabolic rate host
- Respiration 10 ? of basal metabolic rate
- Surgical incision large ? ?
- Preparation solution
- Alcohol-based sol.gtwater-based sol.
223) Core Temperature Plateau
- Final phase of the typical intra op. hypothermia
curve - After 24h of anesthesia and surgery
- Constant core temperature
- Passive and actively maintained
233) Core Temperature Plateau
- (1) Passive plateau
- Metabolic heat production heat loss
- Thermoregulatory defences(-)
- During anesthesia and surgery
- Anesthesia metabolic heat production ?
- High heat loss cool op. room
- cool IV and
irrigating fluid - surgical
incisions evaporation and radiation loss - Behavioral components not available
- autonomic response impared.
- ? A passive plateau rarely develop
- Each degree core temp. reduce heat loss roughly
by 10 - Slower decrease metabolic heat production (i.e
6/ ºc ) - Most common effective insulted small op.
243) Core Temperature Plateau
- (2) Active plateau
- by trigger thermoregulatory vasoconstriction.
- 3435? core temp trigger thermoregulatory
vasoconstriction (typical concent. of most
anesthetics) - Vasoconstriction sl. reduce cutaneous heat loss
but an important influence on distribution of
body heat - Body heat by metabolic active organ in core
thermal compart. - Tonic vasoconstriction constrain of heat in core
compart. - 3? or 4? core-to-peripheral temp. gradient.
- Revasoconstriction restrict further flow on
heat. - ? Core temp. plateau.
- Body heat content and mean body temp.?
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263) Core Temperature Plateau
- (3) Limb tourniquets
- A special case of core temperature plateau
- ? Intense vasoconstriction - no blood
- Not exchange blood or heat
- Not escape metabolic heat from core
- Remain relatively warm (core thermal
compart.) - Inflate - help to prevent hypothermia
- Release - precipitous hypothermia (after drop)
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284) Pediatric Patients
- Infant
- Larger head surface
- Thin skull and scalp
- Larger surface area
- ? Larger heat loss
- The linear hypothermic phase rapid
- ? High surface-area-to-weight ratio
- Respiratory lossessimilar to adults
293. Neuraxial Anesthesia
- 1) Redistribution
- Major initial cause of hypothermia
- Central inhibit thermoregulatory control
- Peripheral block of sympathetic and motor NN.
- Prevent thermoregulatory vasoconstriction and
shivering - Typically restricted to the legs
- Core temp. decrease by restributionhalf of
general anesthesia - 1st hour most important cause of core
hypothermia - Core temp. subsequently decreases linearly
303. Neuraxial Anesthesia
- Redistribution during epidural anesthesia in
volunteers - 1st hour core temp.? 0.80.3?
- redistribution 89
- 20 Kcal trunk ?extremities
- 2hours core temp.? additional 0.40.3?
- redistribution 62
- during 3hour core temp.? 1.20.3?
- redistribution 80
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323. Neuraxial Anesthesia
- 2) Lack of an active core temp. plateau
- Neuraxial anesthesia
- Primary cause of hypothermia
- Peripheral nerve block
- Unblocked region vasoconstriction and shivering
? insufficient prevent further hypothermia - Minor surgery no matter
- Large operation serious hypothermia
333. Neuraxial Anesthesia
- 3) Neuraxial and general anesthesia
- Core temp? general anes.gtregional anes.
- Redistribution of body heat primary cause of
hypothermia during 1st hour of neuraxial or
general anesthesia - Redistribution decreases core temp. gen. ane.
2x - Short proceduregreater hypothermia in general
anes - Loss less to redistribution and near normal
metabolic heat production in reg. anes. - Long, large operations
- General anes core temp. plateau
- Neuraxial anes continue hypothermia
343. Neuraxial Anesthesia
- (1) Combined neuraxial and general anesthesia
- Great risk for perioperative hypothermia
- ? Initially rapid hypothermia (redistribution to
all 4 extremities) - During linear phase continue to cool
relatively higher rate - 3 additional factors
- Neuraxial reduces vasoconstriction threshold
- Epidural effect superimposed general anesthesia
effect - Later vasoconstriction
- Lower core temperature
- General anesthesia inhibits shivering
- Peripheral N. block prevents vasoconstriction in
the legs - - most important factor core temp. continue
to decrease
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364. Return to Normothermia
- Surgical pt. hypothermia
- ? Thermoregulatory defenses impaired
- by general and regional
anesthesia - most sedatives
- Heat loss during surgery
- Ex.) 3? reduction in mean body temp.
- 175 Kcal in a 70-Kg pt.
- roughly the basal heat production for
3hr.
374. Return to Normothermia
- Full postop. recovery of protective
thermoregulatory responses limited by residual
volatile anesthetics or opioid (pain) - Brain anesthetic concentrations decrease rapidly
- Reemergence of thermoregulatory responses
(vasoconstriction and shivering) - Decrease continuous heat loss
- Constrain metabolic heat to the thermal core.
- Increase metabolic heat production
- Core temp. increase toward normal value after
anesthesia is discontinued
384. Return to Normothermia
- Arterio-venous shunt vasoconstricton
- during postanesthetic recovery in
hypothermic pts - Shivering is common
- Postop. core temp. in hypothermic pts.
- Increase relatively slowly
- Often require 2 hr to normal values
- Rapid increase in anesthetized volunteers
- ? Prolonged hypothermia
- Magnitude of the heat debt
- Thermoregulatory compensation
- Not max. activate by residual volatile
anesth. - and opioid
39Summary
- Hypothermia during general anesthesia
- 3 phase
- Initial rapid reduction core temp
- Internal redistribution of body heat
- Redistribution from inhibit tonic
vasoconstriction - Linear decrease core temp.
- Determined by difference between heat loss and
protection - Core temperature plateau
- Thermoregulatory vasoconstriction
- Restrict core-to-peripheral flow of heat
- Normal core-to- peripheral temp. gradient
40Summary
- Spinal or epidural anesthesia
- Hypothermia
- Redistribution of body heat major initial cause
- Restricted to the leg half
- Linear hypothermia
- Continued
- Constriction is blocked peripherally
- Large operations serious hypothermia
41Summary
- Postperative return to normothermia
- Trigger normal thermoregulatory defenses
- Need 2-5h
- Residual anesthesia
- Opioid (for pain)
- Degree of hypothermia
- Age of the patient