Perianesthetic thermoregulation and heat balance in humans
- 1 May 1993
- journal article
- review article
- Published by Wiley in The FASEB Journal
- Vol. 7 (8) , 638-644
- https://doi.org/10.1096/fasebj.7.8.8500688
Abstract
General anesthesia markedly impairs normal control of body temperature, reducing the threshold (triggering core temperature) for thermoregulatory vasoconstriction from approximately 37 to approximately 34.5 degrees C. Sweating and active vasodilation thresholds similarly are increased, widening the range of temperatures not triggering regulatory compensations from approximately 0.2 to approximately 4 degrees C. However, once initiated, the gains (slopes of response intensity vs. core temperature curves) and maximum intensities of thermoregulatory responses are nearly normal. Intraoperative core temperature initially decreases rapidly because anesthetic-induced inhibition of tonic thermoregulatory vasoconstriction causes a core-to-peripheral redistribution of body heat. The subsequent slower, linear decrease in body temperature results from heat loss exceeding metabolic heat production. And finally, after 3-4 h of anesthesia, core temperature stabilizes at an abnormally low value. In patients experiencing ...Keywords
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