This site is intended for healthcare professionals

Go to /sign-in page

You can view 5 more pages without signing in

Hypothermia (operating theatre)

Last reviewed dd mmm yyyy. Last edited dd mmm yyyy

Authoring team

Patient hypothermia is a continuous concern during surgery under a general anaesthetic. It is caused by:

  • the anaesthetic:
    • unconscious patient, therefore, lack of behavioural measures to maintain warmth
    • cutaneous vasodilatation with increased heat loss due to indirect hypothalamic depression of agent and direct peripheral action
    • lack of shivering due to central depression
    • cold anaesthetic gases respired
    • cold fluids given intravenously

  • surgery:
    • patient usually has relatively large proportion of body surface area exposed
    • immobile, no possibility of skeletal muscle activation
    • low ambient theatre temperature encourages radiation and conduction losses
    • theatre air systems e.g. laminar flow, increase heat loss by convection
    • cold surgical instruments applied to skin
    • haemorrhage of relatively warm blood at core temperature

Prevention is the aim. Most measures are simple e.g. insulating all but surgical field, warming blood.


Related pages

Create an account to add page annotations

Annotations allow you to add information to this page that would be handy to have on hand during a consultation. E.g. a website or number. This information will always show when you visit this page.