The effect of a forced‐air warming blanket on patients' end‐tidal and transcutaneous carbon dioxide partial pressures during eye surgery under local anaesthesia: a single‐blind, randomised controlled trial

Summary Surgical drapes used during eye surgery are impermeable to air and hence risk trapping air underneath them. We investigated the effect of a forced‐air warming blanket on carbon dioxide accumulation under the drapes in patients undergoing eye surgery under local anaesthesia without sedation....

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Published inAnaesthesia Vol. 70; no. 12; pp. 1390 - 1394
Main Authors Sukcharanjit, S., Tan, A. S. B., Loo, A. V. P., Chan, X. L., Wang, C. Y.
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published England Blackwell Publishing Ltd 01.12.2015
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Summary:Summary Surgical drapes used during eye surgery are impermeable to air and hence risk trapping air underneath them. We investigated the effect of a forced‐air warming blanket on carbon dioxide accumulation under the drapes in patients undergoing eye surgery under local anaesthesia without sedation. Forty patients of ASA physical status 1 and 2 were randomly assigned to either the forced‐air warmer (n = 20) or a control heated overblanket (n = 20). All patients were given 1 l.min−1 oxygen. We measured transcutaneous and end‐tidal carbon dioxide partial pressures, heart rate, arterial pressure, respiratory rate, temperature and oxygen saturation before and after draping, then every 5 min thereafter for 30 min. The mean (SD) transcutaneous carbon dioxide partial pressure in the forced‐air warming group stayed constant after draping at 5.7 (0.2) kPa but rose to a maximum of 6.4 (0.4) kPa in the heated overblanket group (p = 0.0001 for the difference at time points 15 min and later). We conclude that forced‐air warming reduces carbon dioxide accumulation under the drapes in patients undergoing eye surgery under local anaesthesia.
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ObjectType-Article-1
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ISSN:0003-2409
1365-2044
1365-2044
DOI:10.1111/anae.13212