Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Keeping cat paws warm during anesthesia helps keep body temperature up
By Kreisler, Rachael E et al.·Published in Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association·2025·Midwestern University·View original on PubMed →
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Original publication title: Insulating the extremities of cats with highly insulating materials during anesthesia reduces core temperature decline with additional benefit from active warming.
- Species:
- cat
Plain-English summary
A group of female cats undergoing surgery were kept warm during anesthesia by covering their legs with special insulating materials. Some cats received additional active warming with a heating element, while others were just insulated or left uncovered. The insulated cats maintained a higher body temperature than those without any covering, which is important because keeping a stable temperature during surgery helps with recovery. Although the active warming provided the best results, the difference was small enough that it might not be worth the extra effort for veterinarians.
People also search for: cat anesthesia temperature · how to keep cat warm during surgery · insulating materials for cats in surgery
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: To evaluate whether covering the extremities of cats with highly insulating materials with or without active warming slows the rate of temperature decrease during anesthesia. METHODS: Insulating devices were created from the best insulating material-2 layers of down blanket-as determined by an in vitro study. Female cats undergoing ovariohysterectomy in a veterinary student surgical program were block randomized to active warming (insulation with heating element), passive insulation (insulation only), or control (no covering). Core body temperature was recorded every minute from induction through recovery. Multivariable linear regression was used to evaluate the rate of temperature decrease and lowest recorded temperature, controlling for weight, postinduction temperature, ambient temperature, and (for lowest temperature) anesthesia duration. RESULTS: 49 female cats were enrolled. In the first 30 minutes, controls decreased by 0.12 °F/min, passive by 0.11 °F/min, and active by 0.09 °F/min. After 30 minutes, temperature decline slowed, with rates of 0.05 °F/min for controls, 0.03 °F/min for passive, and 0.01 °F/min for active. The lowest recorded temperatures were 1.2 and 1.9 °F, higher in the passive and active groups, respectively. CONCLUSIONS: Covering the extremities of cats undergoing anesthesia with highly insulating materials slows core temperature decrease. CLINICAL RELEVANCE: Covering the extremities of cats resulted in a lowest temperature between 1 and 2 °F greater than controls. While active warming has a greater effect than passive insulation, the absolute difference in lowest temperature, 0.7 °F, may not justify the additional challenges of adding a heating source.
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Search related cases →Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/40324475/