Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of contributors
- Foreword
- Section I Basic sciences
- Chapter 1 General physiology
- Chapter 2 System-specific physiology
- Chapter 3 Pain and analgesia
- Chapter 4 Local anaesthetics
- Chapter 5 Sedation
- Chapter 6 Physics and measurement
- Section II Anaesthesia and peri-operative care for surgical specialties
- Section III At a glance
- List of abbreviations
- Index
- References
Chapter 6 - Physics and measurement
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 July 2014
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of contributors
- Foreword
- Section I Basic sciences
- Chapter 1 General physiology
- Chapter 2 System-specific physiology
- Chapter 3 Pain and analgesia
- Chapter 4 Local anaesthetics
- Chapter 5 Sedation
- Chapter 6 Physics and measurement
- Section II Anaesthesia and peri-operative care for surgical specialties
- Section III At a glance
- List of abbreviations
- Index
- References
Summary
Heat and temperature
Temperature control is clinically important. Peri-operative hypothermia, in particular, carries a significant morbidity and surgical patients are at particular risk from operative heat loss combined with impaired heat conservation caused by anaesthesia. Furthermore, effective re-warming of patients that have been allowed to become cold can be very difficult. Careful pre-operative and intra-operative management can avoid this if the mechanisms of heat loss and redistribution within the body are appreciated.
Measuring heat and temperature
Heat is a form of energy. It arises from the random jostling motion of the particles that make up the matter from which everything is made. The amount of thermal movement is measured by the concept of temperature; objects with little thermal energy having a low temperature. The Celsius/centigrade scale is commonly used in clinical practice and is defined in terms of the freezing (0oC) and boiling (100oC) points of water at standard atmospheric pressure. The SI unit of temperature, however, is the kelvin where 0 K is defined as the temperature at which thermal disorder ceases (absolute zero). A change in temperature of 1oC and 1 K are defined to be the same magnitude so that absolute zero turns out to be equal to -273.15oC.
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- A Surgeon's Guide to Anaesthesia and Peri-operative Care , pp. 63 - 76Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2014