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Hypothermia and Prolonged Time From Procedure End to Extubation After Endovascular Thoracic Aortic Surgery

Authors :
Harendra Arora
John A. Encarnacion
Quefeng Li
Yutong Liu
Priya A. Kumar
Alan M. Smeltz
Source :
Journal of cardiothoracic and vascular anesthesia. 36(12)
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

Perioperative hypothermia (core temperature36°C) occurs in 50%-to-80% of patients recovering from thoracic aortic surgery, though its effects have not been described fully in this context. The authors, therefore, sought to characterize the incidence of perioperative hypothermia and its association with time from procedure end to extubation in endovascular aortic surgical patients.A retrospective cohort study.At a single academic tertiary center.Patients recovering from thoracic aortic surgery with lumbar drains.None.A total of 196 patients were included in this study, 55 of whom were hypothermic with temperatures35.0°C at the end of surgery. Though the unadjusted time to extubation was not statistically different in the hypothermic group (median 8 minutes, IQR 5-13.5 minutes) compared to the normothermic group (median 7 minutes, IQR 4-12 minutes; p = 0.062), multivariate predictors of increased time from procedure end to extubation included hypothermia (p = 0.011), age (p = 0.009), diabetes (p = 0.015), history of carotid disease (p = 0.040), and crystalloid volume (p = 0.019).Hypothermia in patients recovering from endovascular aortic surgery was associated with prolonged time from procedure end to extubation. Because of the retrospective observational nature of the authors' analysis, it was not possible to determine the extent to which prolonged mechanical ventilation was influenced by low temperature.

Details

ISSN :
15328422
Volume :
36
Issue :
12
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of cardiothoracic and vascular anesthesia
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....42f16ac53008740d38b071585fa6604b