Abstract

BackgroundForced-air warming is an established strategy for maintaining perioperative normothermia. However, this warming strategy can potentially contaminate the surgical field by circulating nonsterile air. This study aimed to determine whether changing practice away from this method resulted in non-inferior rates of perioperative hypothermia.MethodsWe performed a chart review of primary total hip and knee arthroplasty patients from 2014 to 2017, when the strategy of intraoperative forced-air warming (FAW) was changed to preoperative FAW along with intraoperative underbody conduction warming (CW) with an underbody warming mattress. Data included patient temperatures throughout all phases of care, blood loss and transfusion requirements, length of postanesthesia care unit (PACU) and hospital stays, and 30-day infection and mortality.ResultsA total of 769 charts were reviewed; 349 patients underwent surgery before the practice change and 420 after. Mean (SD; 95% CI) body temperatures at the time of incision were lower for group 1 than for group 2 (34.55 vs 35.52 °C [0.97 °C; 95% CI, 0.72-1.23 °C]). The average nadir of intraoperative body temperature was lower for group 1 than for group 2 (difference of means, 0.44 °C; 95% CI, 0.18-0.71 °C). Group 2 had a higher percentage of patients who presented hypothermic (temperature <36.0 °C) on arrival in the PACU (12.9% vs 7.7%).ConclusionPreoperative convective warming combined with intraoperative underbody conductive warming maintains normothermia during primary total joint arthroplasty and is non-inferior to forced-air intraoperative warming alone.

Highlights

  • Inadvertent perioperative hypothermia is an important issue surrounding patients undergoing surgery

  • Mean (SD; 95% CI) body temperatures at the time of incision were lower for group 1 than for group 2 (34.55 vs 35.52 °C [0.97 °C; 95% CI, 0.72-1.23 °C])

  • The average nadir of intraoperative body temperature was lower for group 1 than for group 2

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Summary

Introduction

Inadvertent perioperative hypothermia is an important issue surrounding patients undergoing surgery. Forced-air convection is an established method of perioperative temperature control for patients undergoing total joint replacement surgery [4,5]. Since SSI and PPJI are important contributors to patient morbidity and mortality, increased hospital lengths of stay, and health care expenditure, alternative warming strategies may need to be considered to maintain normothermia while avoiding the potential risk of infection by contamination of the surgical field [11,12,13]. Forced-air warming is an established strategy for maintaining perioperative normothermia. This warming strategy can potentially contaminate the surgical field by circulating nonsterile air. This study aimed to determine whether changing practice away from this method resulted in non-inferior rates of perioperative hypothermia

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