Abstract
The combining of epidural anesthesia with general anesthesia impairs central and peripheral thermoregulatory control and therefore is often accompanied by unintended intraoperative hypothermia. However, little is known about the cardiovascular response to hypothermia during combined epidural and general anesthesia. The authors assessed the effects of hypothermia during such combined anesthesia. The authors randomly assigned 30 mongrel dogs anesthetized with isoflurane (1.0%) to three groups of 10: control, receiving general anesthesia alone; thoracic injection, additionally receiving thoracic epidural anesthesia; and lumbar injection, additionally receiving thoracolumbar epidural anesthesia. Core temperature was lowered from 38.5 degrees C to approximately 34 degrees C (mild hypothermia) using a femoral arteriovenous shunt in an external cool water bath. During hypothermia, the authors measured heart rate, cardiac output, and plasma catecholamine concentrations in each group. Ejection fraction was also measured using echocardiography. Compared with measurements during baseline conditions (general anesthesia alone with no epidural injection and no hypothermia) in the control, thoracic, and lumbar injection groups, the injections followed by hypothermia produced 17, 32, and 41% decreases in heart rate; 22, 32, and 47% reductions in cardiac output; 66, 85, and 92% decreases in the epinephrine concentrations; and 27, 44, and 85% decreases in the norepinephrine concentrations. In contrast, ejection fraction did not change in any group. Mild hypothermia during combined epidural anesthesia and general anesthesia markedly reduced cardiac output in dogs, mainly by decreasing heart rate.
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