Intraoperative core temperature and infectious complications after colorectal surgery: A registry analysis - 23/04/20


Abstract |
Study objective |
Moderate hypothermia (e.g., 34.5 °C) causes surgical site infections, but it remains unknown whether mild hypothermia (34.6 °C–35.9 °C) causes infection. Therefore, the objective of this study was to evaluate the relationship between intraoperative time-weighted average core temperature and a composite of serious wound and systemic infections in adults having colorectal surgery over a range of near-normal temperatures.
Design |
Retrospective, single center study.
Setting |
The operating rooms of the Cleveland Clinic Foundation from January 2005 to December 2014.
Patients |
Adult patients having colorectal surgery at least 1 h in length who received both general anesthesia and esophageal core temperature monitoring.
Intervention(s) |
Time weighted average intraoperative core temperature.
Measurements |
Our primary outcome was a composite of serious infections obtained from a surgical registry and billing codes. Average intraoperative esophageal temperatures and the composite of serious 30-day complications were assessed with logistic regression, adjusted for potential confounding factors.
Main results |
A total of 7908 patients were included in the analysis. A 0.5 °C decrease in time-weighted average intraoperative core temperature ≤ 35.4 °C was associated with an increased odds of serious infection (OR = 1.38, P = .045); that is, hypothermia below 35.4 °C progressively worsened infection risk. Additionally, at higher core temperatures, the odds of serious infection increased slightly with each 0.5 °C increase in average temperature (OR = 1.10, P = .047).
Conclusions |
Below 35.5 °C, hypothermia was associated with increased risk of serious infectious complications. Why composite complications increased at higher temperatures remains unclear, but the highest temperatures may reflect febrile patients who had pre-existing infections. Avoiding time-weighted average core temperatures <35.5 °C appears prudent from an infection perspective, but higher temperatures may be needed to prevent other hypothermia-related complications.
Le texte complet de cet article est disponible en PDF.Highlights |
• | Temperatures below 35.5 °C are associated with increased risk of serious infectious complications. |
• | Avoiding time-weighted average core temperatures <35.5 °C is beneficial from an infection perspective. |
• | Higher temperatures may be needed to prevent coagulopathy and other hypothermia-related complications. |
Keywords : Infection, Temperature, Hypothermia, Colorectal, Surgical site
Plan
Vol 63
Article 109758- août 2020 Retour au numéroBienvenue sur EM-consulte, la référence des professionnels de santé.
L’accès au texte intégral de cet article nécessite un abonnement.
Déjà abonné à cette revue ?
