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Temperature Regulation in Children

Temperature Regulation in Children

Temperature Regulation in Children

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Temperature Regulation in Children - Why Kids Chill Fast

Children are prone to hypothermia under anesthesia due to:

  • ↑ Body Surface Area to Mass Ratio: Larger than adults, promoting rapid heat loss to the environment.
  • ↓ Thermal Insulation:
    • Thinner skin.
    • Less subcutaneous fat, especially premature infants.
  • Immature Thermoregulatory System:
    • Shivering is poorly developed/absent in neonates.
    • Neonates rely on non-shivering thermogenesis (NST) in brown fat.
  • Anesthetic-Induced Impairment:
    • Vasodilation: Redistributes core heat peripherally.
    • Inhibition of shivering.
    • Hypothalamic thermoregulatory depression.
  • Higher Basal Metabolic Rate: Generates more heat/kg, but losses often exceed production.

⭐ Neonates lose heat approximately 4 times faster than adults; vigilant temperature monitoring is essential.

Temperature Regulation in Children - The Heat Thieves

  • Children lose heat rapidly via four main "thieves":
    • Radiation (40-60%): To cooler objects not in direct contact (e.g., OR walls). Largest source.
    • Convection (15-30%): To air currents (e.g., OR ventilation, drafts).
    • Evaporation (20-25%): From skin, respiratory tract, open wounds. ↑ with ↓ humidity.
    • Conduction (3-5%): Via direct contact with cooler surfaces (e.g., OR table, cold fluids). Mechanisms of Heat Loss in Infants

⭐ Radiation is the predominant mechanism of heat loss in infants and children in the operating room.

Temperature Regulation in Children - The Icy Impact

  • Children, especially neonates, are highly susceptible to hypothermia (core temp < 36°C).
    • Reasons: Large surface area to mass ratio, thin subcutaneous fat, immature thermoregulation, limited shivering.
    • Neonates: Rely on Non-Shivering Thermogenesis (NST) in Brown Adipose Tissue (BAT) for heat.
  • Major Heat Loss Mechanisms (📌 CCRE):
    • Radiation: To cooler OR environment (largest, ~40-60%).
    • Convection: Air currents over skin (~15-30%).
    • Evaporation: From skin, respiratory tract (~20%).
    • Conduction: Direct contact with cold surfaces (~5%).
  • Consequences of Hypothermia:
    • Delayed emergence, ↑ O₂ demand (shivering).
    • Coagulopathy, ↑ surgical site infections.
    • Cardiac irritability, metabolic acidosis.
  • Prevention Strategies:
    • Ambient OR temp: 23-25°C for infants, 21°C for children.
    • Forced-air warming devices.
    • Warmed IV fluids & inspired gases.
    • Minimize exposure; use head coverings. Infant heat loss mechanisms in operating room

⭐ Volatile anesthetics and opioids can significantly impair non-shivering thermogenesis (NST) in neonates by inhibiting brown adipose tissue (BAT) function, making active warming crucial.

Temperature Regulation in Children - Stay Warm, Stay Safe

  • Infants & children: prone to hypothermia (core temp < 36°C) due to:
    • Large surface area to volume ratio.
    • Less subcutaneous fat; limited shivering.
    • Immature thermoregulatory center.
  • Heat Loss Mechanisms: Radiation (major), Convection, Evaporation, Conduction. (📌 RCEC)
  • Adverse Effects: ↑O₂ consumption, delayed emergence, coagulopathy, wound infection, cardiac events.
  • Prevention & Management:
    • Ambient OR temp: 23-25°C (infants), 21°C (children).
    • Forced-air warmers, warmed IV fluids (37°C), radiant warmers.
    • Active airway heating & humidification.
    • Continuous core temperature monitoring (esophageal, rectal).

⭐ Non-shivering thermogenesis in neonates occurs in brown adipose tissue (BAT) but is rapidly depleted.

Pediatric Anesthesia Temp Management Protocol

High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways

  • Infants are prone to hypothermia: large surface area/volume ratio, ↓ fat, immature thermoregulation.
  • Non-shivering thermogenesis (NST) in brown fat is primary neonatal heat source, blunted by anesthesia.
  • Anesthetics impair thermoregulation, causing vasodilation & ↓ metabolic rate, promoting heat loss.
  • Hypothermia complications: delayed recovery, ↑O₂ consumption, coagulopathy, cardiac events, ↑infection risk.
  • Prevention: pre-warming, forced-air warmers, warmed IV fluids, ↑ambient temperature, minimize exposure.
  • Malignant Hyperthermia (MH): rare, critical hyperthermic emergency triggered by specific anesthetic agents.

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