NCT06543134 · RECRUITING
Evaluation of The Relationship Between Perioperative Hypothermia and Emergence Agitation
This study looks at whether patients who get too cold during surgery (perioperative hypothermia) are more likely to wake up confused or agitated afterward (called emergence agitation). Researchers will track body temperature and use a sedation scale to see if there is a connection. This is an observational study — no experimental drug or device is being tested, just a relationship being measured in surgical patients.
You may qualify if
- Patients with informed consent Elective planned cases
- Patients between the ages of 18-65
- American Society of Anesthesiologists ASA classification ASA 1-2 patients
- Surgeries planned to last at least 30 minutes.
You're excluded if
- Patients who refuse to participate in the study,
- patients who are considered for emergency surgery,
- pediatric patients,
- patients with peripheral vascular diseases or carotid stenosis,
- patients using antidepressants or antipsychotic drugs
- those with neurological diseases will be excluded from the study.
The sponsor's own eligibility wording, lightly reformatted. The study team makes the final eligibility decision — worth discussing with your doctor.
Eligibility criteria as of 2024-08-07