| Literature DB >> 7788193 |
C S Lin1, I S Lin, C H Liu, C F Wang, H S Wu, C G Liu, L W Chen.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Thermoregulatory responses are thought to be drastically suppressed by general anesthesia. In previous studies, it was shown that halothane, isoflurane and fentanyl-N2O combination decrease the threshold of vasoconstriction in general anesthesia. Propofol is a recently introduced intravenous anesthetic. The thermoregulatory threshold of its administration during surgery has not been quantified. MATERIALS: Fourteen unpremedicated ASA class I patients were anesthetized with N2O (67%) and propofol (2 mg/kg in bolus followed by 6 mg/kg/h infusion) during elective surgery of free flap. Patients were randomly assigned either to receive additional warming (n = 5) or standard (n = 9) management. Significant vasoconstriction was prospectively defined as the temperature gradient between forearm surface and finger-tip surface is > or = 4 degrees C, and the thermoregulatory threshold was defined as the esophageal temperature (core temperature) at a point where the skin temperature gradient between two tested zones exceeds 4 degrees C.Entities:
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Year: 1995 PMID: 7788193
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Acta Anaesthesiol Sin ISSN: 0254-1319