Impact of a Global Warming Strategy of the Patient on the Prevalence of Hypothermia in the Recovering Room
Impact of a Global Warming Strategy, From the Patient Arrival in the Operating Room to His Discharge From the Recovering Room, Versus a Recommended Management of Intraoperative Warming on the Prevalence of Hypothermia in the Recovering Room
Poitiers University Hospital
174 participants
Nov 8, 2024
INTERVENTIONAL
Conditions
Summary
50% of patients are hypothermic when they arrive in the recovery room. This hypothermia is potentially at risk for the patient (increases bleeding, risk of infection, risk of cardiac involvement, morbid mortality) and 33,2% steel hypothermic when they discharge from the recovering room. The anesthesia team must prevent these risks through prevention and treatment measures. Currently the majority of patient warming is done only in the operating room, we want to measure the impact of the extension of this warming before and after the surgery on the patient's temperature and on side effects related to hypothermia.
Eligibility
Inclusion Criteria1
- Patient undergoing laparoscopic visceral surgery under general anesthesia with transition to recovering room
Exclusion Criteria3
- Patient undergoing urgent surgery.
- Presence of pre-existing infection (temperature higher than 38°C when receiving the patient in the hospital ward.
- Patient with predetermined length of stay in recovering room.
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Interventions
A systematic pre- and post-operative warming associated with the optimization of per-operative warming.
per-operative warming only thanks to the "Optimized" Forced air blanket with a prewarming of 10 minutes performed in the operating room.
Locations(1)
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NCT06551558