Comparative Study
English Abstract
Journal Article
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[The comparative effectiveness of different infusion and blood warming methods].

Der Anaesthesist 1996 November
UNLABELLED: Heat loses during surgery occur mainly to the environment and due to infusions and irrigations. Infusions given at room temperature account for a great deal of the total heat deficit during major operations, e.g., the infusion of 53 ml/kg 20 degrees C fluid leads to a loss of 1 degree C in mean body temperature. Hence, heating i.v. fluids will add to the effect of other measures aimed at reducing heat loss to the environment. We investigated the efficacy of different warming methods for i.v. fluids in an experimental model by measuring the temperature at the end of the delivery line.

METHODS: The following in-line warmers were studied: Hotline HL-90 and System H-250/heat exchanger D-50 (Level 1 Technologies, Marshfield, USA), Astotherm IFT 260 (Stihler Elektronic GmbH, Stuttgart, Germany), RSLB 30 H Gamida (Productions Hospitalieres Francaises, Eaubonne, France), Bair Hugger 241/Modell 500 Prototype (Augustine Medical, Eden Prairie, USA). They were compared with pre-warming infusions (39 degrees C) only using the Clinitherm S (Labor Technik Barkey GmbH, Bielefeld, Germany) and pre-warming with "active insulation" of the delivery line using the Autotherm/Autoline system (Labor Technik Barkey GmbH, Bielefeld, Germany). We investigated the influence of four variables on the efficacy of warming: (1) flow rate (50-15,000 ml/h); (2) ambient temperature (20 degrees C and 25 degrees C); (3) infusion bag temperature (6 degrees C, 20 degrees C, and 39 degrees C); and (4) length of infusion system downstream from the heat exchanger. Fluid temperatures were measured using thermistors of 1 mm diameter (Modell YSI 520, Yellow Springs Instruments Co., Yellow Springs, USA) incorporated into 3-way stopcocks. Temperatures were recorded using Hellige temperature monitors (Hellige GmbH, Freiburg im Breisgau, Germany) and the signals were collected at 10 Hz through an AD converter and averaged over 1 min. Flows were calculated by timed collection into calibrated cylinders; 10 to 12 different flow rates were taken to define one temperature/ flow plot. Effective warming was defined as a temperature > 33 degrees C at the end of the infusion line.

RESULTS: At high flow rates (> 2,500 ml/h) using 20 degrees C fluids at 20 degrees C ambient temperature, the H-250/D-50 system gave the highest temperatures throughout the range and showed effective warming from 1,300 ml/h on over the entire range tested (35 degrees C at 17,000 ml/h) compared to the RSLB 30 H Gamida system (3,000-18,000 ml/h) (Fig. 2). This difference in performance was almost abolished with fluids at 6 degrees C (Fig. 4). Similar efficacy could be reached by using prewarmed infusions that gave effective warming at > 2,000 ml/h and reached 39 degrees C at 13,000 ml/h. Prewarmed infusions could be used effectively down to > 80 ml/h applying "active insulation" (Autotherm/Autoline) to the whole infusion system. The Hotline HL-90 (50-4, 700 ml/h) appeared to be the most effective in-line warmer in the low (< 250 ml/h) and middle (250-2,500 ml/h) flow range, followed by the Astotherm IFT 260 (400-4,000 ml/h), but only if used with a length of 40 cm down-stream from the heat exchanger (Fig. 1). Increasing this distance to 145 cm markedly reduced its efficacy below the range of 2,000 ml/min (1,200- 3,000 ml/h) (Fig. 5). The Bair Hugger 241 Prototype showed a narrow effective range (700-1,300 ml/h) that could be extended beyond 1,300 ml/h by the use of prewarmed infusions (Figs. 1 and 3). The performance for 6 degrees C solutions and ambient temperatures of 25 degrees C are given in Fig. 4 and Table 1.

CONCLUSIONS: The importance of infusion warming increases with the amount of fluid given.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED)

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