Samenvatting
Anesthesia causes substantial perturbation in the human heat balance. Nearly all patients
administered anesthesia become hypothermic. Under normal physiological conditions, the
core-to-peripheral temperature gradient is maintained by tonic vasoconstriction. By the induction
of anesthesia, vasoconstriction is impaired. Hence, heat redistribution takes place
from the warm core to the colder periphery, leading to hypothermia. The heat balance during
cardiac surgery differs from most other surgery types in that the body is also actively
cooled by means of a heart lung machine to provide extra protection to the heart and the
brain. A drawback of rewarming with help of the heart lung machine is that heat is transferred
to the core compartment more quickly than to the peripheral tissues, leading to large
core-to-periphery gradients. After decoupling the heat lung machine, internal redistribution
of heat causes afterdrop: a decrease in temperature of the core. Afterdrop slows down the
patient’s recuperation process. Therefore, more knowledge is needed about the impaired thermoregulatory system during anesthesia and the effect of different protocols on temperature
distribution.
This thesis focused on the development of a computer model that is able to describe
heat transfer during anesthesia with the emphasis on cardiac surgery. The model that was
developed consists of three parts: 1) a passive part, which gives a simplified description
of the human geometry by means of a multi-segmental, multi-layered representation of the
body, and that takes into account all passive heat transfer processes, 2) an active part that
takes into account the thermoregulatory system as function of the amount of anesthesia and
3) submodels, through which it is possible to adjust the surgery and patient specific boundary
conditions.
Heat transfer in the passive part was modelled with help of the Pennes’ bioheat equation.
This equation was solved using spatial and temporal discretization schemes. Boundary con168
Summary
ditions were formulated to account for conductive, convective, radiative and respiratory heat
losses. Specific submodels were designed to model the thermal influences of the heart lung
machine, forced-air heaters, heating mattress and the heat loss through the wound.
For the development of the thermoregulatory model, patient data was required. To that
end, a clinical experiment was conducted. Two groups of aortic valve patients were studied:
one group was rewarmed with and one group was rewarmed without using forced-air warmers.
A significant reduction of afterdrop was observed in the group that was rewarmed with
forced-air heating.
The active model was derived combining a pharmacological model and the data of the aortic
valve patients. The pharmacological model was used to calculate the propofol (the most
often used anesthetic agent) concentration in the blood. Anesthetic drugs lower the threshold
for vasoconstriction in linear proportion to increased plasma concentration. A relation was
derived between the anesthesia concentration calculated with help of the pharmacological
model and the vasoconstriction threshold found in the aortic valve patients. As a first approach,
a stepwise response was used to model the gain and intensity of the vasoconstriction
response. The model was validated by comparing temperatures predicted by the computer
model to experimental data.
A method was developed to refine the vasoconstriction relations of the thermoregulatory
model. It was possible to determine the intensity of the centrally mediated sympathetic vasoconstrictor tone and the proportional distribution coefficients for vasoconstriction on different
body parts. The method was used in a study protocol involving healthy volunteers for three
body parts. In addition, detailed measurements were performed on volunteers to obtain proportionality values for the other body parts. The refined vasoconstriction model was added in
the whole body thermal model. The complete model was validated against experimental data
of healthy subjects and cardiac patients and showed in general good agreement.
The validity of the model was tested for other types of surgery, i.e. orthopedic back
surgery and deep hypothermic surgery with circulatory arrest. Finally, the model was used to
study the effect of different temperature protocols like the use of forced-air heaters, increasing
the environmental temperature, using heating mattresses or using a mild hypothermia
protocol instead of a moderate hypothermia protocol.
Overall, the model is able to predict temperature responses of healthy persons and patients
undergoing surgery at temperatures between moderate hypothermia and normothermia, with
skin temperatures ranging between 30 and 34oC. If the boundary conditions and initial conditions
are accurately known, the model predicts core temperature within typically 0.5oC and
skin temperature within typically 1oC.
Originele taal-2 | Engels |
---|---|
Kwalificatie | Doctor in de Filosofie |
Toekennende instantie |
|
Begeleider(s)/adviseur |
|
Datum van toekenning | 5 nov 2008 |
Plaats van publicatie | Eindhoven |
Uitgever | |
Gedrukte ISBN's | 978-90-386-1430-4 |
DOI's | |
Status | Gepubliceerd - 2008 |