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NCT07251439

Impact of Perioperative Body Temperature on Postoperative Complications and Pain in Video-assisted Thoracoscopic Surgery Patients Utilizing Continuous Temperature Monitoring

Sponsor: Peking University People's Hospital

View on ClinicalTrials.gov

Summary

A report from the National Cancer Center (published in JNCC) shows that lung cancer has the highest rates of both new cases and deaths in China. Surgery using a tiny camera (thoracoscopic surgery) is a main treatment for early-stage lung cancer. However, this type of chest surgery carries a much higher risk of patients developing low body temperature during the operation compared to other surgeries. This is because: (1) The surgery is complex and takes longer; (2) The chest cavity is open and exposed to the cool operating room air; (3)General anesthesia affects the brain's ability to regulate temperature and widens blood vessels, causing faster heat loss.Studies show that low body temperature happens in about 65-73% of these chest surgeries, while the average for surgeries longer than 2 hours nationwide is only about 40%. Low body temperature during surgery isn't just a problem at the time. It also increases the risk of negative outcomes after surgery. As known, it worsens post-surgery pain and increases risks of complications, such as infections, heart problems and bleeding issues. A common pain control technique for chest surgery is injecting local anesthesia medicine near the spine (Thoracic Paravertebral Block or TPVB). This technique is very effective at reducing pain after surgery, both short-term and long-term. However, new research suggests this nerve block might cause blood vessels to widen, potentially making patients lose body heat faster during surgery. Because TPVB is used so often, it's hard to tell if low body temperature during surgery directly causes worse pain afterwards, or if the nerve block itself influences both temperature and pain. The potential connection between low temperature caused by TPVB and later pain is not yet clear. The objective of this study is to investigate how low body temperature during and around the time of surgery affects complications after surgery (such as infections, heart and lung problems, longer hospital stays, etc.) in patients undergoing thoracic surgery. The investigators also aim to find the relationship between low body temperature during surgery and the occurrence of pain after surgery.

Official title: Impact of Perioperative Body Temperature on Postoperative Complications and Pain in Video-assisted Thoracoscopic Surgery Patients Utilizing Continuous Temperature Monitoring: A Prospective Cohort Study

Key Details

Gender

All

Age Range

18 Years - Any

Study Type

OBSERVATIONAL

Enrollment

144

Start Date

2026-01-01

Completion Date

2027-12-31

Last Updated

2025-11-26

Healthy Volunteers

No

Interventions

DEVICE

Continuous body temperature monitoring

A wireless body temperature transducer is located under the auxiliary. The body temperature is continuously monitored perioperatively.