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Active Warming During Elective Caesearean Section

NHS Foundation Trust logo

NHS Foundation Trust

Status

Completed

Conditions

Preoperative Hypothermia

Treatments

Device: Conduction warming mattress
Device: Forced air warming

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT02201095
STH18196

Details and patient eligibility

About

During anaesthesia for caesarean section it is common to lose heat and become hypothermic, (<36 degrees C). In order to try and avoid this all women are given warmed intravenous fluid and insulated from cold surfaces. There are also 2 types of machine available to actively warm women;

  1. Forced Air Warming - that uses a disposable sheet the woman lies upon with lots of air pockets that have warm air blown into them continuously by a fan.
  2. Conduction Warming Mattress - a thin mattress which covers the operating table and the woman lies on top. The padded mattress has strips of material that heat up when electricity passes through it, similar to a normal electric blanket.

We plan to carry out a randomised controlled trial to compare these 2 methods with the current practice of no active warming.

The hypothesis for this study is that active warming women during elective caesarean section prevents women's temperature from dropping and keeps them more comfortable than if active warming were not used.

Full description

When a baby is delivered by a surgical procedure (a caesarean section) the woman will usually have a "spinal" anaesthetic. With a "spinal", local anaesthetic is injected into the spinal fluid to make the woman numb from her chest to her feet, allowing her to be comfortable but awake during the birth. During this type of anaesthetic it is common to lose heat and become cold or "hypothermic" measured as less than 36 degrees Celsius. Becoming this cold can be uncomfortable for the woman but also causes other problems. It can make blood clotting less effective, alter the way wounds heal afterwards and make the woman more likely to develop infections or problems related to her heart and lungs.

To help keep their temperature stable, the investigators give all women fluid into the veins that is already warm and ensure that they are well insulated from any cold surfaces. There are two machines that the investigators can also use to actively warm patients but these are not yet used in every case. The first method is called "Forced Air Warming" and uses a special disposable sheet the woman lies upon with lots of air pockets that have warm air blown into them continuously by a fan. The woman is surrounded by these pockets of warm air, which help to warm her and also insulate against heat loss. The second method is called a "Conduction Warming Mattress" and uses a thin mattress which covers the operating table and the woman lies on top. The padded mattress has strips of material that heat up when electricity passes through it, similar to a normal electric blanket.

The investigators have already looked at the records of some women having caesarean sections in our hospital and found that both forced air warming and conduction mattress warming seem to help them stay warm. However, the investigators would like to study this in more detail and prove scientifically whether these methods are effective. Our aim in this study is to see if warming machines can help prevent women getting too cold, and prove scientifically whether one is more effective.

The hypothesis for this study is that active warming women during elective caesarean section prevents women's temperature from dropping and keeps them more comfortable than if active warming were not used.

The women will have exactly the same anaesthetic as they would have had if they were not in the study. If a woman agrees to be in the study she will be chosen randomly to receive either, normal care (including warmed fluids but no warming machines), additional warming with forced air or additional warming by conduction mattress. Her temperature will be measured at regular intervals before, during and after the caesarean section, at the same time she will be asked to score herself on a thermal comfort scale. The results will be analysed to compare the temperature changes in each group.

The investigators hope that the active warming machines will keep body temperature stable and prevent hypothermia. If the investigators find out that these machines prevent women getting cold, they can ensure that the most effective methods of warming during caesarean section operations are used and minimise problems due to becoming cold.

Enrollment

130 patients

Sex

Female

Ages

18+ years old

Volunteers

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Patients with a singleton, uncomplicated pregnancy, presenting for elective caesarean section under spinal anaesthesia, where surgery and anaesthesia are expected to be uncomplicated. Patients scheduled for tubal ligation surgery (sterilisation) as part of the caesarean section may also be included.

Exclusion criteria

  • Age under 18
  • BMI <19 or >30
  • Diseases of pregnancy: e.g. pregnancy induced hypertension
  • Grand Multiparity - ie parity of 5 or greater
  • Pre-operative pyrexia (temperature of 37.5 degrees C or greater)
  • Pre-operative hypothermia (temperature 36.0 degrees or cooler)
  • Significant co-existing maternal disease - e.g. congenital heart disease
  • Co-existing maternal disease that could impact on temperature- e.g. hypo/hyperthyroid
  • Coagulation abnormalities or anticipated excessive blood loss including any form of abnormal placentation
  • Surgical procedure expected not to be routine/deviation from normal practice
  • Condition preventing full, informed consent.

Trial design

Primary purpose

Prevention

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

Double Blind

130 participants in 3 patient groups

Normal care
No Intervention group
Description:
Normal care - no active warming
Forced air warming
Active Comparator group
Description:
Underbody forced air warming blanket
Treatment:
Device: Forced air warming
Conduction warming mattress
Active Comparator group
Description:
Underbody conduction warming mattress
Treatment:
Device: Conduction warming mattress

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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