Pre-warming before general anesthesia with isoflurane delays the onset of hypothermia in rats

2019 
General anesthesia causes hypothermia by impairing normal thermoregulatory mechanisms. Redistribution of warm blood from the core to the periphery is the primary mechanism in the development of hypothermia and begins following induction of anesthesia. Raising skin temperature before anesthesia reduces the temperature gradient between core and periphery, decreasing the transfer of heat. This prospective, crossover study (n = 17 adult male and female SD rats) compared three treatment groups: PW1% (pre-warming to increase core temperature 1% over baseline), PW40 (pre-warming to increase core temperature to 40 degrees C) and NW (no warming). The PW1% group was completed first to ensure tolerance of pre-warming. Treatment order was then randomized and alternated after a washout period. Once target temperature was achieved, anesthesia was induced and maintained with isoflurane in oxygen without further external temperature support. Pre-warming was effective at delaying the onset of hypothermia, with a significant difference between PW1% (11.2 minutes) and PW40 (14.7 minutes, p = 0.0044 (95%CI -12 to -2.2), PW40 and NW (6.0 minutes, p = 0.003 (95%CI 1.8 to 8.7) and PW1% and PW40 (p = 0.004, 95%CI -12 to -2.2). The rate of heat loss in the pre-warmed groups exceed that of the NW group: PW1% versus NW (p = 0.005, 95%CI 0.004 to 0.027), PW40 versus NW (p
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