Temperature Monitoring - Why We Sweat It
- Why Monitor? Prevents perioperative hypothermia complications (e.g., coagulopathy, ↑infection risk, delayed recovery, cardiac events).
- Normal Core Temp: 36.5-37.5°C.
- Core vs. Peripheral:
- Core (e.g., pulmonary artery, distal esophagus, nasopharynx, tympanic membrane): Reflects true body temperature.
- Peripheral (e.g., skin, axilla): Variable; influenced by environment & vasoconstriction.
- Thermoregulation & Anesthesia:
- Normal responses: Vasoconstriction, shivering, non-shivering thermogenesis (NST), sweating.
- Anesthesia: Impairs central regulation, ↓thresholds for vasoconstriction & shivering; abolishes behavioral responses.
⭐ Anesthesia abolishes behavioral responses and impairs autonomic thermoregulation, leading to a core-to-peripheral redistribution of heat.
- Mechanisms of Heat Loss (R>Cv>Ev>Cd):
- Radiation (~60%): To cooler objects not in direct contact.
- Convection (~15-30%): To moving air currents.
- Evaporation (~20%): From skin, open wounds, respiratory tract.
- Conduction (~5%): To cooler surfaces in direct contact (e.g., OR table).

Temperature Monitoring - Probing the Degrees
Core temperature: 36.5-37.5°C. Perioperative hypothermia (< 36°C) is common.
Monitoring Sites:
| Site | Type | Advantages | Disadvantages | Clinical Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Pulmonary Artery | Core | Gold standard; heart/brain temp | Invasive; complications risk | Cardiac/major vascular surgery. |
| Distal Esophagus | Core | Reliable core temp | Misplacement (cool gases) | Lower 1/3-1/4; most surgeries. |
| Nasopharynx | Core | Near brain; less invasive | Epistaxis; airway gas effect | Posterior nasopharynx. |
| Tympanic Membrane | Core | Brain temp (carotid) | Cerumen; placement critical | Specific sensor; hypothalamic supply. |
| Rectal | Intermediate | Easy access | Slow response; contamination | Lags core by 0.5-1°C. |
| Bladder | Intermediate | Core if urine > 0.5 mL/kg/hr | Low urine output effect | Foley sensor. |
| Axillary | Peripheral | Non-invasive | Unreliable; ambient temp | Not for precise core. |
| Skin | Peripheral | Easy; non-invasive | Poor core correlation; sweat | Forehead strips inaccurate. |
Device Types:
- Thermistors: Semiconductor; resistance ↓ with ↑ temp. Most common.
- Thermocouples: Voltage at junction of two dissimilar metals; proportional to temp.
- Liquid Crystal Devices: Change color at specific temps. Skin patches.
- Infrared Thermometers: Detect thermal radiation. Tympanic, temporal artery.

Temperature Monitoring - The Big Chill
Perioperative hypothermia: Core temp < 36°C.
⭐ Mild perioperative hypothermia (core temperature 34-36°C) significantly increases risk of surgical site infections, adverse myocardial outcomes, and impaired coagulation.
- Phases (Intraop Hypothermia):
- Redistribution: Rapid initial ↓ (1st hr)
- Linear Decline: Heat loss > production
- Plateau: Vasoconstriction / warming balances
- Risk Factors: Anesthetics, cold OR/fluids, large incisions, long surgery, age extremes, low BMI, ASA >II.
- Adverse Effects:
- Cardiac: Arrhythmias, ischemia
- Coagulopathy: Platelet dysfunction, ↓enzyme activity
- SSI: Impaired immunity, vasoconstriction (↓tissue O2)
- Delayed drug metabolism
- Shivering: ↑O2 consumption (400-500%), ↑CO2, ↑ICP/IOP
- Prevention & Management:
- Pre-warming (30-60 min); Passive insulation (blankets)
- Active warming: Forced air, fluid warmers, ↑OR temp (>21°C)
- Monitor core temp (esophagus, nasopharynx, bladder, tympanic)

Temperature Monitoring - Fever Pitch
- Perioperative Hyperthermia: Core temp > 38°C (not due to warming).
- Causes: Malignant Hyperthermia (MH), sepsis, drugs (atropine), thyrotoxicosis, transfusion reactions, NMS, iatrogenic.
- Malignant Hyperthermia (MH):
- Genetic; Triggers: Volatiles, succinylcholine.
- Signs: ↑ETCO2 (early!), tachycardia, muscle rigidity, rhabdomyolysis, ↑temp (late).
⭐ Unexplained, persistent increase in end-tidal CO2 (hypercarbia) is often the earliest and most sensitive sign of Malignant Hyperthermia.
- Rx: Stop triggers, dantrolene 2.5 mg/kg IV, 100% O2, cooling.
- Consequences (severe): CNS dysfunction, multi-organ failure.
- Management: Treat cause, active cooling, support.
High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways
- Core temperature monitoring is vital; pulmonary artery (gold standard), distal esophagus, nasopharynx are key sites.
- Peripheral sites (skin, axilla) lag behind core changes, less reliable.
- Hypothermia (<36°C) under anesthesia risks coagulopathy, infection, shivering, delayed recovery.
- Malignant Hyperthermia (MH): early sign is unexplained ↑ETCO2, late sign is rapid ↑temperature.
- Shivering dramatically increases oxygen consumption (↑VO2).
- Radiation is the main mechanism of intraoperative heat loss.
- Thermistors are common in temperature probes.
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