Preoperative infusion of amino acids prevents postoperative hypothermia

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Abstract

Intraoperative infusion of amino acids has been found to stimulate energy expenditure and thereby prevent anaesthesia-induced hypothermia. Rectal temperature and respiratory gas exchange were measured in 24 female patients before and after isoflurane anaesthesia. Sixteen patients had an amino acid mixture of 240 kJ h-1, infused over 1-2 h before anaesthesia and eight control patients received saline. We compared the results with data from six female volunteers treated with amino acids; they were not premedicated or anaesthetized. In lorazepam premedicated patients, amino acids increased the pre-anaesthesia temperature by 0.3°C h-1, twice that observed in the volunteers. At awakening after anaesthesia, energy expenditure increased to 50-60% above baseline in the amino acid treated patients, while in the control patients, receiving saline, no increase occurred, despite vigorous shivering. Amino acid infusion prevented hypothermia by increasing heat accumulation and causing delayed stimulation of heat production. The heat accumulation response to amino acid infusion was increased after premedication with lorazepam.

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APA

Selldén, E., Bränström, R., & Brundin, T. (1996). Preoperative infusion of amino acids prevents postoperative hypothermia. British Journal of Anaesthesia, 76(2), 227–234. https://doi.org/10.1093/bja/76.2.227

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