Clinical Trials Directory

Trials / Completed

CompletedNCT03630887

Prevention of Perioperative Hypothermia in Patients Submitted to Transurethral Resection

Status
Completed
Phase
N/A
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
297 (actual)
Sponsor
Dr. Negrin University Hospital · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
18 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

Hypothermia is a frequent perioperative complication. When the negative effects of anesthesia on temperature are aggravated by other factors, such as glycine infusion in transurethral resection, temperature can decrease even more. Preoperative warming prevents hypothermia, lowering the temperature gradient between core and peripheral compartments and reducing thermal redistribution. The most recent clinical practice guidelines advocate for active prewarming before induction of general anaesthesia since it is very effective in preventing perioperative hypothermia. However, the ideal warming time prior to the induction of anesthesia has long been investigated. This study aims to evaluate the optimal time period of preoperative forced-air warming to reduce the incidence of hypothermia at the end of surgery in patients submitted to transurethral resection. This is a clinical trial comparing different time periods of prewarming in patients submitted to undergo elective transurethral resection. We will compare different time periods: 0 minutes (control group), 15 minutes, 30 minutes and 45 minutes. 144 patients are going to be included in this study (36 patients in each group). Measurement of temperature will be performed using a tympanic thermometer. Patients will be followed throughout their hospital admission. Data will be recorded using a validated instrument and will be analysed using the statistics program R Core Team.

Detailed description

Maintaining patient's temperature above 36 grades Celsius throughout the perioperative period is challenging. Thus, it is essential to monitor temperature in order to be able to take measures to avoid the appearance of hypothermia. Once the temperature has decreased, its treatment is difficult since the application of heat to the body surface takes a long time to reach the core thermal compartment. Intraoperative warming alone cannot avoid postoperative hypothermia. The application of forced-air warming system during the preoperative period has been shown to be the most effective measure to prevent hypothermia and maintain intraoperative normothermia. However, it would not be efficient to provide a long-time prewarming in short-term surgical procedures. Thus, the ideal warming time prior to the induction of anesthesia has long been investigated. Due to the searching of optimal prewarming time and the lack of evidence about the efficiency of prewarming in patients submitted to transurethral resection, the conductance of this clinical trial is justified.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
DEVICEWarmTouch Model 5900, Covidien Ltd, Mansfield, USAForced-air warming will be applied in the preanesthetic room during different time periods.

Timeline

Start date
2018-08-14
Primary completion
2018-10-31
Completion
2018-10-31
First posted
2018-08-15
Last updated
2020-06-11

Locations

1 site across 1 country: Spain

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT03630887. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.