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Hypothermia; Anesthesia clinical trials

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NCT ID: NCT04027842 Completed - Clinical trials for Hypothermia; Anesthesia

Effect of 10 Minute-prewarming on Core Body Temperature During Gynecologic Laparoscopic Surgery Under General Anesthesia

Start date: January 9, 2019
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Previous research has shown beneficial effects of prewarming on preventing inadvertent perioperative hypothermia (IPH). Warming the surface of the body before the induction of anesthesia can reduce the temperature difference between the core and periphery, thereby reducing the degree of core-to-peripheral thermal redistribution. It has been proved that initiation of warming before surgery can be more useful for preventing IPH than warming only during surgery. Nevertheless, there are not many researches on effects of short period (<30 min) prewarming, especially in gynecologic laparoscopic surgery. Accordingly, the investigators designed this study to test if IPH can be effectively prevented when 10 minutes of prewarming is added to intraoperative active warming in patients undergoing gynecologic laparoscopic surgery.

NCT ID: NCT03878901 Not yet recruiting - Clinical trials for Hypothermia; Anesthesia

Systemic Prevention and Management for Perioperative Hypothermia and Its Effect on Patients Outcome

Start date: April 1, 2019
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

This is a randomized, single-blinded, multi-center study clinical trial to determine both clinical and health outcomes of stratified warm strategy to prevent intraoperative hypothermia. Participants enrolled into this trial will be from elective major surgery population in PUMC Hospital, Beijing Hospital and Xuanwu Hospital. investigators plan to enroll approximately 800 participants. Hypothermia risk will be evaluated through PREDICTOR model in all participants. According to hypothermia risk level, these participants will be stratefied into high, moderate and low risk group. Participants in each group will be randomly categorize into warm group and control group. Active warm and fluid warm strategy, prewarm and fluid warm strategy and only prewarm strategy are used for high risk, moderate risk and low risk patients seperately. For controll group traditional passive warm was used.

NCT ID: NCT03630887 Completed - Clinical trials for Perioperative/Postoperative Complications

Prevention of Perioperative Hypothermia in Patients Submitted to Transurethral Resection

Start date: August 14, 2018
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Hypothermia is a frequent perioperative complication. When the negative effects of anesthesia on temperature are aggravated by other factors, such as glycine infusion in transurethral resection, temperature can decrease even more. Preoperative warming prevents hypothermia, lowering the temperature gradient between core and peripheral compartments and reducing thermal redistribution. The most recent clinical practice guidelines advocate for active prewarming before induction of general anaesthesia since it is very effective in preventing perioperative hypothermia. However, the ideal warming time prior to the induction of anesthesia has long been investigated. This study aims to evaluate the optimal time period of preoperative forced-air warming to reduce the incidence of hypothermia at the end of surgery in patients submitted to transurethral resection. This is a clinical trial comparing different time periods of prewarming in patients submitted to undergo elective transurethral resection. We will compare different time periods: 0 minutes (control group), 15 minutes, 30 minutes and 45 minutes. 144 patients are going to be included in this study (36 patients in each group). Measurement of temperature will be performed using a tympanic thermometer. Patients will be followed throughout their hospital admission. Data will be recorded using a validated instrument and will be analysed using the statistics program R Core Team.

NCT ID: NCT03617809 Completed - Clinical trials for Postoperative Complications

Perioperative Hypothermia in Patients Submitted to Laparoscopic Urological Surgery

Start date: August 6, 2018
Phase:
Study type: Observational [Patient Registry]

Hypothermia is a frequent perioperative complication. Its appearance can have deleterious effects such as perioperative bleeding or surgical site infection. Once the temperature has decreased, its treatment is difficult. Preoperative warming prevents hypothermia, lowering the temperature gradient between core and peripheral compartments and reducing thermal redistribution. The most recent clinical practice guidelines advocate for active prewarming before induction of general anaesthesia since it is very effective in preventing perioperative hypothermia. However, the ideal warming time prior to the induction of anesthesia has long been investigated. This study aims to evaluate if different time periods of preoperative forced-air warming reduces the incidence of hypothermia at the end of surgery in patients submitted to laparoscopic urological surgery under general anesthesia. This is an observational prospective study comparing routine practice of pre-warming in consecutive surgical patients scheduled to laparoscopic prostatectomy or nephrectomy between August and December 2018. In this study 64 - 96 patients will be included and prewarming will be applied following routine clinical practice. The prewarming time will depend on the time the patient has to wait before entering in the operating theatre. Measurement of temperature will be performed using an esophagic thermometer. Patients will be followed throughout their hospital admission. Data will be recorded using a validated instrument and will be analysed using the statistics program R Core Team.

NCT ID: NCT03527329 Completed - Clinical trials for Hypothermia; Anesthesia

Perioperative Hypothermia in Patients Submitted to Transurethral Resection

Start date: March 2014
Phase:
Study type: Observational

Hypothermia is a frequent perioperative complication. Its appearance can have deleterious effects such as myocardial ischemia or perioperative bleeding. When the negative effects of anesthesia on temperature are aggravated by other factors, such as glycine infusion in transurethral resection, temperature can decrease even more. Once the temperature has decreased, its treatment is difficult. Preoperative warming prevents hypothermia, lowering the temperature gradient between core and peripheral compartments and reducing thermal redistribution. The most recent clinical practice guidelines advocate for active prewarming before induction of general anaesthesia since it is very effective in preventing perioperative hypothermia. However, the ideal warming time prior to the induction of anesthesia has long been investigated. This study aims to evaluate if different time periods of preoperative forced-air warming reduces the incidence of hypothermia at the end of surgery in patients submitted to transurethral resection. This is an observational prospective study comparing routine practice of pre-warming in consecutive surgical patients scheduled to undergo elective transurethral resection between March 2014 and April 2018. Three-hundred patients are included in this study and prewarming will be applied following routine clinical practice. The prewarming time will depend on the time the patient has to wait before entering in the operating theatre. Measurement of temperature will be performed using a tympanic thermometer. Patients will be followed throughout their hospital admission. Data will be recorded using a validated instrument and will be analysed using the statistics program R Core Team.

NCT ID: NCT03473470 Recruiting - Clinical trials for Hypothermia; Anesthesia

Evaluation of the Active Warming Effects on Maternal and Neonatal Outcome During Cesarean Delivery

Start date: December 22, 2016
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

A prospective randomized study of healthy term parturients undergoing cesarean delivery was designed to assess the impact of the active warming on perioperative and postoperative temperature. The main objective is to evaluate the maternal core temperature in the perioperative and postoperative period during cesarean delivery. The secondary objectives are to assess the incidence of maternal hypothermia, the incidence of maternal shivers, the evaluation of maternal thermal comfort, the neonatal temperature at birth, the Apgar score at 1 and 5 minutes, the umbilical pH, the evaluation of coagulative assessment in case of maternal hypothermia trough the use of thromboelastography. The patients are randomized into three groups: a group of no warmed patients, a second group of Active waming patients with iv fluids and lower body forced air warming and a third group of Active warming patients with only warmed iv fluids. The inclusion criteria are healthy parturients up to age 18. The exclusion criteria included parturients who develop fever, diabetes mellitus, BMI up to 40kg/ m2, coagulative disorders, pre eclampsia or eclampsia, all the factors that can cause intraoperative bleeding such as placental abruption or antecedent placenta overgrowth ( placenta previa).

NCT ID: NCT03157609 Completed - Children Clinical Trials

Can the SpotOn™ Zero-Heat-Flux-Thermometry Sensor Accurately Measure Core Temperature in Children?

Start date: November 15, 2017
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The present study aims to assess the accuracy of the SpotOn™ Zero-heat-flux-thermometry sensor in measuring core temperature in the paediatric population in the perioperative period.

NCT ID: NCT03111875 Completed - Clinical trials for Surgery--Complications

Perioperative Hypothermia and Myocardial Injury After Non-cardiac Surgery

PROTECT
Start date: March 27, 2017
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

We propose to test the hypothesis that aggressive warming reduces the incidence of major cardiovascular complications, compared to routine care. Half of the participants will be randomly assigned to routine care (core temperature ≈35.5°C), while the other half will receive aggressive warming (>37°C core temperature) in a multi-center trial.

NCT ID: NCT02990429 Completed - Clinical trials for Hypothermia; Anesthesia

Forced Air and Intravenous Fluid Warmers in Gynecologic Laparoscopic Surgery

Start date: April 2016
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Perioperative hypothermia is a common problem. It has been defined as a core temperature below 36ºC. The reasons why patient undergoing gynecologic laparoscopic surgery has perioperative hypothermia because the reduced metabolic heat production, redistribution of heat from the core to the periphery and impaired thermoregulation (due to anesthetics), use of cool carbon dioxide gas insufflations and surgical irrigation solution, as well as heat loss due to the cool environment. This perioperative problem has been linked to adverse patient outcomes such as myocardial ischemia as hypothermia increases plasma catecholamine, surgical site infection as hypothermia diminishes wound tissue O2 tension and coagulopathy as hypothermia impairs platelet function. It claims that perioperative heat loss occurs by radiation (60%), convection (25%) and evaporation (10%). This is caused by the difference between peripheral body and ambient temperature, air circulation around the body and vasodilatation. In daily practice, most anesthesia personnel warm patient peri-operatively by using force air warmer and intravenous fluid warmer. This study aimed to compare the difference of core and room temperature in patients undergoing gynecologic laparoscopic surgery by using forced air and intravenous fluid warmer