Background: Body temperature is poorly regulated in patients with end-stage liver disease. Due to the prolonged surgery time and anhepatic time as well as the complex surgical procedures performed in liver transplanta...Background: Body temperature is poorly regulated in patients with end-stage liver disease. Due to the prolonged surgery time and anhepatic time as well as the complex surgical procedures performed in liver transplantation, the body temperature fluctuates greatly. This study investigated the effect of intraoperative body temperature fluctuations on the prognosis of liver recipients. Methods: The body temperatures of liver recipients recorded from the induction of anesthesia(T 0) until the end of surgery(T 14) were retrieved. The patients were divided into two groups: the hypothermia group( < 35 °C and ≥ 5 min) and the normothermia group( ≥ 35 °C or < 35 °C but < 5 min). Intraoperative and postoperative variables were compared between the two groups, and the correlations between the duration of hypothermia and the medical variables were analyzed. Results: Of the 107 patients, 67 patients were in the normothermia group, and 40 in the hypothermia group. The lowest body temperature was at 5 min after reperfusion for the whole cohort. Compared with the normothermia group, patients in the hypothermia group were more prone to bleeding, had a longer intubation time and increased rates of bacterial infection and acute pulmonary edema after liver transplantation( P < 0.05). Hypothermia time was positively correlated with bleeding volume, intubation time, units of blood transfusions and intensive care stay, but negatively correlated with urine output. Conclusions: The intraoperative body temperature exhibited a graphical "V" trend, and the lowest temperature was at 5 min after reperfusion. The longer the duration of hypothermia, the more unfavourable the prognosis.展开更多
基金financially supported by grants from the Key Re-search Projects of Tianjin Health Industry(13KG105,16KG101)Natural Science Foundation of Tianjin(17JCYBJC28000)
文摘Background: Body temperature is poorly regulated in patients with end-stage liver disease. Due to the prolonged surgery time and anhepatic time as well as the complex surgical procedures performed in liver transplantation, the body temperature fluctuates greatly. This study investigated the effect of intraoperative body temperature fluctuations on the prognosis of liver recipients. Methods: The body temperatures of liver recipients recorded from the induction of anesthesia(T 0) until the end of surgery(T 14) were retrieved. The patients were divided into two groups: the hypothermia group( < 35 °C and ≥ 5 min) and the normothermia group( ≥ 35 °C or < 35 °C but < 5 min). Intraoperative and postoperative variables were compared between the two groups, and the correlations between the duration of hypothermia and the medical variables were analyzed. Results: Of the 107 patients, 67 patients were in the normothermia group, and 40 in the hypothermia group. The lowest body temperature was at 5 min after reperfusion for the whole cohort. Compared with the normothermia group, patients in the hypothermia group were more prone to bleeding, had a longer intubation time and increased rates of bacterial infection and acute pulmonary edema after liver transplantation( P < 0.05). Hypothermia time was positively correlated with bleeding volume, intubation time, units of blood transfusions and intensive care stay, but negatively correlated with urine output. Conclusions: The intraoperative body temperature exhibited a graphical "V" trend, and the lowest temperature was at 5 min after reperfusion. The longer the duration of hypothermia, the more unfavourable the prognosis.