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      Development and evaluation of a novel predictive nomogram for assessing the risk of intraoperative hypothermia in patients undergoing thoracoscopic pulmonary tumor surgery

      research-article
      ,
      Heliyon
      Elsevier
      Unplaned intraoperative hypothermia, Thoracoscopic pulmonary tumor surgery, Predictors, Nomogram

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          Abstract

          Background

          The prevalence of unplanned intraoperative hypothermia during thoracoscopic pulmonary tumor resection under general anesthesia is considerable, which may result in numerous adverse reactions.

          Objective

          The aim of this study was to develop and validate a nomogram-based prediction model for assessing the risk of intraoperative hypothermia in patients undergoing thoracoscopic pulmonary tumor resection under general anesthesia.

          Design

          This was a retrospective study conducted at a tertiary class A hospital.

          The study included 506 adult patients who underwent thoracoscopic lung tumor resection under general anesthesia in 2022.

          Methods

          The clinical data of 506 patients who underwent thoracoscopic pulmonary tumor surgery from January 1 to December 31, 2022 were collected and randomly divided into the modeling group (n = 356) and the validation group (n = 50). The data of 356 patients were used establish a prediction model for intraoperative hypothermia. A total of 17 factors covering patient demographics, disease characteristics, and surgical conditions were gathered. The least absolute shrinkage and selection operator regression model was utilized to optimize the risk model's features. Multivariate logistic regression analysis was employed to construct the final predictive model.

          Rresults

          Gender, body mass index, preoperative body temperature and operation time were used as predictors to construct the nomogram. The C-index of the model was 0.831 (95%CI: 0.799–0.863). The C-index of external validation was 0.820, which verified the calibration of the model. Decision curve analysis validated the clinical utility of the nomogram, particularly when using a threshold probability of unplanned intraoperative hypothermia 1 %.-74 %.

          Conclusions

          The nomogram constructed in this study can effectively predict the risk of intraoperative hypothermia in patients undergoing thoracoscopic lung tumor resection under general anesthesia. The nomogram incorporated readily available predictors such as sex, body mass index, preoperative body temperature, and duration of surgery.

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          Most cited references27

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          Temperature monitoring and perioperative thermoregulation.

          Most clinically available thermometers accurately report the temperature of whatever tissue is being measured. The difficulty is that no reliably core-temperature-measuring sites are completely noninvasive and easy to use-especially in patients not undergoing general anesthesia. Nonetheless, temperature can be reliably measured in most patients. Body temperature should be measured in patients undergoing general anesthesia exceeding 30 min in duration and in patients undergoing major operations during neuraxial anesthesia. Core body temperature is normally tightly regulated. All general anesthetics produce a profound dose-dependent reduction in the core temperature, triggering cold defenses, including arteriovenous shunt vasoconstriction and shivering. Anesthetic-induced impairment of normal thermoregulatory control, with the resulting core-to-peripheral redistribution of body heat, is the primary cause of hypothermia in most patients. Neuraxial anesthesia also impairs thermoregulatory control, although to a lesser extent than does general anesthesia. Prolonged epidural analgesia is associated with hyperthermia whose cause remains unknown.
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            Perioperative thermoregulation and heat balance.

            Core body temperature is normally tightly regulated to within a few tenths of a degree. The major thermoregulatory defences in humans are sweating, arteriovenous shunt vasoconstriction, and shivering. The core temperature triggering each response defines its activation threshold. General anaesthetics greatly impair thermoregulation, synchronously reducing the thresholds for vasoconstriction and shivering. Neuraxial anaesthesia also impairs central thermoregulatory control, and prevents vasoconstriction and shivering in blocked areas. Consequently, unwarmed anaesthetised patients become hypothermic, typically by 1-2°C. Hypothermia results initially from an internal redistribution of body heat from the core to the periphery, followed by heat loss exceeding metabolic heat production. Complications of perioperative hypothermia include coagulopathy and increased transfusion requirement, surgical site infection, delayed drug metabolism, prolonged recovery, shivering, and thermal discomfort. Body temperature can be reliably measured in the oesophagus, nasopharynx, mouth, and bladder. The standard-of-care is to monitor core temperature and to maintain normothermia during general and neuraxial anaesthesia.
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              • Record: found
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              • Article: not found

              Mild perioperative hypothermia.

              D Sessler (1997)
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                Author and article information

                Contributors
                Journal
                Heliyon
                Heliyon
                Heliyon
                Elsevier
                2405-8440
                24 November 2023
                December 2023
                24 November 2023
                : 9
                : 12
                : e22574
                Affiliations
                [1]Department of Anesthesiology and Surgery, The First Affiliated Hospital of Soochow University, 215006 Suzhou City, Jiangsu Province, China
                Author notes
                []Corresponding author. panaifen0528@ 123456126.com
                Article
                S2405-8440(23)09782-7 e22574
                10.1016/j.heliyon.2023.e22574
                10711139
                38090000
                ccfdfd95-3593-4286-aee5-c0ce7445ff4e
                © 2023 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Ltd.

                This is an open access article under the CC BY-NC-ND license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/).

                History
                : 4 July 2023
                : 5 November 2023
                : 15 November 2023
                Categories
                Research Article

                unplaned intraoperative hypothermia,thoracoscopic pulmonary tumor surgery,predictors,nomogram

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