Abstract

Following open heart surgery, changes in core and peripheral skin temperature and changes in the core-peripheral temperature gradient were measured in 10 children. These were correlated with changes in cardiac index, systemic vascular resistance index, mean arterial pressure and urinary output. During the study intervals, which lasted 1 h each, no changes in medical management were made. Using Spearman's rank correlation, only a change in central venous pressure was found to correlate with a change in the core-peripheral temperature gradient. We conclude that a change in the core-peripheral temperature will give valuable information about the patient's intravascular volume.

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