Importance of Perioperative Patient Warming

2026-02-26


WHAT IS PATIENT WARMING?

Patient Warming uses active warming devices and passive warming measures to maintain the patient normothermia, in which a patient’s body is at its normal core temperature of 98.6°F (37°C). This includes providing heat to the patient before, during, or after procedures in the Operating Room (OR).

 

WHY WARMTH MATTERS BEFORE, DURING, AND AFTER SURGERY?

A patient’s normothermic temperature is a critical vital sign that needs to be sustained throughout the three phases of a surgical procedure. This includes preoperative, intraoperative, and postoperative care.

Normally, normothermic patients experience mild hypothermia during the different phases of a surgical procedure, but the goal of any perioperative team is to mitigate this risk.

 

WHY DO YOU NEED TO WARM PATIENTS BEFORE SURGERY?

When a patient is not pre-warmed prior to being transferred to the OR, an active warming device should be started as soon as possible when the patient arrives in the OR. The biggest concern is waiting too long to get the treatment started. Maintaining a patient’s normothermia is much easier than regaining the body temperature lost to hypothermia. This is why early and frequent monitoring and treatment are important.

Benefits of warming patients before surgery:

Decreased Risk for Surgical Site Infections (SSIs)
While some of the data is still inconclusive, a study by Kurz et al3 determined that patients with a body temperature 2°C lower than normal had three times the susceptibility to contracting an SSI during the surgical procedure.

Increased Patient Blood Loss
Studies have concluded that mild hypothermia (36°-37°C) can contribute to a significant increase in blood loss by 16%4. In addition, mild hypothermia can also slow the blood’s coagulation process. This adds to the time it takes for a patient’s wounds or incision to heal and in turn slows down their recovery.

Extended Hospital Stays
Some studies have indicated that extended hospital stays are indicative of patients that experience untreated perioperative and postoperative hypothermia. Side effects of hypothermia included a patent’s inability to tolerate food after a surgical procedure. In some situations, once the hypothermic effect was corrected, an extra day of stay in the hospital was required to mitigate the chance of infection.

Patient Discomfort
While most findings of hypothermia studies of hyperthermia on surgical patients focus on direct outcomes for the patient’s health, there has also been a correlation to the patient’s peri and postoperatively comfort. Mildly hypothermic patients often complain of discomfort, which may be reflected in patient satisfaction surveys conducted post-recovery.

 

 

WHY IS IT IMPORTANT TO KEEP PATIENTS WARM DURING SURGERY?

Anesthesia exposure is associated with 80% of heat loss in surgical patients, this is why it is important to implement active warming methods on hand and keep the patient normothermia, as these are the only methods that counter the effects of anesthesia.

 

WHAT IS POSTOPERATIVE HYPOTHERMIA?

When the patient’s temperature drops below 96.8°F (36° C) they are considered hypothermic and must be addressed to maintain their normothermic temperature. The drop in temperature could be due to induction of anesthesia, patient skin exposure for long hours, or other Operating Room environment factors.

How can perioperative hypothermia be prevented?

To mitigate the negative outcomes of hypothermia on a surgical patient, AORN recommends that hospitals implement methods for treating hypothermia for all patients during perioperative care. This includes:

Assessing Every Patient Preoperatively
Monitoring the Patient Throughout Intraoperative Care
Managing Core Body Temperature Postoperatively

 

WHAT ARE THE AORN GUIDELINES FOR PATIENT WARMING?

AORN states that all perioperative patients are at risk for developing hypothermia. The perioperative team is responsible for properly monitoring their patients’ normothermic core temperature of 98.6°F (37° C) pre, intra, and postoperatively. Patients with a temperature of 96.8°F (36° C) or below are considered mildly hypothermic and must be addressed to maintain their normothermic temperature.

If the perioperative team does not address hypothermia early in the process, several factors can negatively impact the patient.

 

WHAT ARE THE METHODS TO WARM A PATIENT?

To mitigate the negative outcomes of hypothermia on a surgical patient, AORN recommends that hospitals implement methods for treating hypothermia for all patients during perioperative care. This includes:

Active warming methods: which would include a patient warming system that externally warms a patient’s body
Passive warming methods: which would include the use of warmed blankets and IV fluids

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