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A systematic review of randomised controlled trials of the effects of warmed irrigation fluid on core body temperature during endoscopic surgeries
Author(s) -
Jin Yinghui,
Tian Jinhui,
Sun Mei,
Yang Kehu
Publication year - 2011
Publication title -
journal of clinical nursing
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.94
H-Index - 102
eISSN - 1365-2702
pISSN - 0962-1067
DOI - 10.1111/j.1365-2702.2010.03484.x
Subject(s) - shivering , medicine , cochrane library , intravenous fluid , hypothermia , randomized controlled trial , irrigation , odds ratio , meta analysis , anesthesia , surgery , ecology , biology
Aims and objectives. The purpose of this systematic review was to establish whether warmed irrigation fluid temperature could decrease the drop of body temperature and incidence of shivering and hypothermia. Background. Irrigation fluid, which is used in large quantities during endoscopic surgeries at room temperature, is considered to be associated with hypothermia and shivering. It remains controversial whether using warmed irrigation fluid to replace room‐temperature irrigation fluid will decrease the drop of core body temperature and the occurrence of hypothermia. Design. A comprehensive search (computerised database searches, footnote chasing, citation chasing) was undertaken to identify all the randomised controlled trials that explored temperature of irrigation fluid in endoscopic surgery. An approach involving meta‐analysis was used. Method. We searched PubMed, EMBASE, Cochrane Library, SCI, China academic journals full‐text databases, Chinese Biomedical Literature Database, Chinese scientific journals databases and Chinese Medical Association Journals for trials that meet the inclusion criteria. Study quality was assessed using standards recommended by Cochrane Library Handbook 5.0.1. Disagreement was resolved by consensus. Results. Thirteen randomised controlled trials including 686 patients were identified. The results showed that room‐temperature irrigation fluid caused a greater drop of core body temperature in patients, compared to warmed irrigation fluid ( p < 0·00001; I 2 = 85%). The occurrence of shivering [odds ratio (OR) 5·13, 95% CI: 2·95–10·19, p < 0·00001; I 2 = 0%] and hypothermia (OR 22·01, 95% CI: 2·03–197·08, p = 0·01; I 2 = 64%) in the groups having warmed irrigation fluid were lower than the group of studies having room‐temperature fluid. Conclusions. In endoscopic surgeries, irrigation fluid is recommended to be warmed to decrease the drop of core body temperature and the risk of perioperative shivering and hypothermia. Relevance to clinical practice. Warming irrigating fluid should be considered standard practice in all endoscopic surgeries.