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PROPERTIES Allow user to leave interaction: Show ‘Next Slide’ Button: Completion Button Label: Anytime Show always View Presentation Critical Temperature-Related Illnesses Dorothy W. Bird, MD Suresh Agarwal, MD Department of Surgery Boston University Medical Center Temperature-Related Illness • Hypothermia – Systemic Hypothermia – Non-freezing Injuries – Freezing Injuries • Hyperthermia – Heat Exhaustion – Heat Stroke – Drug-Induced Hyperthermia Slide 3 Heat Exchange Mechanisms Radiation: loss of heat by infrared rays Conduction: transfer of heat from object to object Convection: current of air carrying heat away from skin Evaporation: warming of water to transform it from liquid to gas Slide 4 Normal Temperature Regulation • Human body generates 1oC/hour • Transfers heat to the environment to maintain body temperature +/- 0.6oC • Normal body temperatures: – 32oC skin – 37oC sublingual – 38oC rectum – 38.5oC deep liver Slide 5 Hypothermia • <35oC (95oF) • Primary (accidental): decrease in core body temperature from environmental cold stress • Secondary: due to metabolic disorder resulting in abnormal heat production or heat-conserving mechanism Slide 6 Hypothermia - Systemic Effects • A. Cardiovascular – Delayed bradycardia (32oC) – ↓MAP, ↓contractility, ↓CO – EKG: J-wave, PR, QRS, QT prolongation – 30oC atrial or ventricular fibrillation – 25oC asystole • B. Respiratory – ↓RR, hypoxia, respiratory acidosis – ↑mucus (cold bronchorrhea) – ↓ciliary action, ↓cough reflex; pneumonia Slide 7 J-Wave • http://www.rcsed.ac.uk/fellows/bcpaterson/new_page_3. htm Slide 8 Hypothermia – Systemic Effects • C. CNS – Abnormal EEG <34oC; Flat EEG 19-29oC – Hyper-reflexia >32oC; Hypo-reflexia <32oC – ↓Mentation, ↓Motor function • D. Coagulation – Platelet sequestration (portal), thrombocytopenia – Impaired platelet function – Coagulation factors: ↓40% activity, ↑PT, PTT – DIC-like syndrome, risk of thromboembolic event Slide 9 Hypothermia – Systemic Effects • E. Renal – ↓Na+ reabsorption • F. GI – Ileus, bowel wall edema, impaired hepatic drug detoxification, pancreatitis, hyperamylasemia, gastric erosions Slide 10 Hypothermia – Systemic Effects • G. Endocrine – Hyperglycemia • H. Immune – ↓endothelial cell adhesion results in ↑infection Slide 11 Hypothermia - Management • ABCs first! • May be hard to palpate pulse/BP in cold, stiff victim • EKG: look for any organized rhythm as evidence of life • CPR ONLY in absence of cardiac rhythm • NO cardiac drugs or defibrillation <28oC Slide 12 Hypothermia - Rewarming • Mild Hypothermia (32-35oC) – Warm environment – blanket, head cover • Moderate Hypothermia (30-32oC) – Heating pad, warm water immersion • Severe Hypothermia (<30oC) – Warm IV fluids (65oC) / blood products (49oC) – Cardiopulmonary bypass – Lavage Slide 13 Re-warming Rates • Spontaneous: 1.2oC/h • Spontaneous + Shivering: 3.6oC/h • Passive External Rewarming: 0.5-2.0oC/h • Active External Rewarming: 1.0-2.5oC/h • Body Cavity Lavage: 1.0-3.0oC/hour • Cardiopulmnary Bypass: 1.0-2.0oC/3-5min • CAVR: 1oC/15.4 min Slide 14 CAVR • Continuous arteriovenous re-warming • Level I warming system • Percutaneous femoral arterial and venous lines • Creates AV fistula where blood is pumped via patient’s own BP through external warming system • More rapid re-warming than other methods • Less invasive, no heparinization needed • Improved survival, multisystem organ failure, SICU stay vs other methods Slide 15 Hypothermia in Trauma • Very common after injury • A form of secondary, unintentional hypothemia • Ominous sign!! – Worsened outcome / mortality if due to trauma – ↑ mortality if patient controlled for ISS, shock, resuscitation volume Slide 16 Hypothermia in Trauma • Stricter Severity Classification: – Mild: 36-34oC – Moderate: 34-32oC – Severe: <32oC • Rapid re-warming with CAVR proven more effective • Failure to re-warm is detrimental to survival! Slide 17 Non-freezing Injury • Chilblain (Pernio) – Cause: Repeated exposure to cold above freezing – Pathophysiology: chronic dermal vasculitis – Appearance: pruritic, red-purple papules, maculares, plaques, nodules, edema, blisters – Treatment: shelter, elevation on sheepskin, gradual rewarming at room temperature – Sequelae: dermopathy; treat with antiadrenergic (prazosin) or calcium-channel blocker (nifedipine) Slide 18 Chilblain • www.answers.com/topic/chilblain • www.ohiohealth.com/bodymayo.cfm?xyzpdqabc=0... Slide 19 Non-freezing Injury • Trench foot (hand) – Cause: chronic exposure to wet conditions just above freezing – Pathophysiology: alternating arterial vasospasm and vasodilation – Appearance: edema, blisters, redness, ecchymosis, ulceration – Treatment: removal from cold, wet environment; gentle warm, dry air; elevation; wound care – Sequelae: cellulitis, lymphangitis, gangrene, demyelation, atrophy, osteoporosis, fallen arches Slide 20 Trench Foot • www.visualstatistics.net • www.pbase.com Slide 21 Frostbite • Freezing injury: Ice crystal formation, cellular dehydration, microvascular occlusion • Pathophysiology: – 1. cellular death from freezing cold – 2. alternating vasoconstriction/vasodilation (Hunting reaction)→ repeat freeze/thaw cycle→ ↑blood viscocity→ progressive thrombosis→ ischemia/necrosis – 3. re-warming→ secondary ischemia/reperfusion Slide 22 Frostbite • Classification: – 1st Degree: tissue freezing, central white anesthetic patch, surrounding erythema – 2nd Degree: tissue freezing, blisters of clear or milky fluid, surrounding edema/erythema – 3rd Degree: tissue freezing and subcutaneous/skin death, hemorrhagic blisters, black eschar (2 weeks) – 4th Degree: tissue necrosis, gangrene, full-thickness tissue loss; hard, cold white, anesthetic Slide 23 Frostbite • www.geradts.com • www.alpineinstitute.blogspot.com Slide 24 Frostbite Treatment 1. Pre-thaw/Pre-hospital Phase – Protect injured limb from trauma – No thawing until definitive re-warming is ensured – NO rubbing! Slide 25 Frostbite 2. Re-warming/Hospital Phase – Rapid re-warming: immersion in large water bath (4042oC) x30-45 minutes – Narcotic pain relief as needed 3. Post-thaw Phase – Wound care: clean and dry skin, elevate, sterile cotton applied between affected toes/fingers, protect from unintentional trauma with tent/cradle Slide 26 Frostbite • Wound Care • Uninfected blebs: keep intact (self-dressing) • Daily or BID dressing change/cleansing in warm whirlpool bath • Aloe vera cream (thromboxane inhibitor) • Physical therapy with edema resolves • No tobacco, nicotine, vasoconstrictors Slide 27 Frostbite • Sequelae • Cold insensitivity • Hyperhidrosis • Neuropathy • ↓ nail/hair growth • Persistent Raynaud’s phenomenon • ↑ risk for re-injury Slide 28 Hyperthemia • Hyperthemia vs. Fever: – elevated body temperature – Hyperthermia: abnormal temperature regulation – Fever: normal temperature regulation with elevated set-point • Hyperpyrexia: extreme temperature elevation (>40oC) Slide 29 Heat Exhaustion • Heat exposure resulting in volume depletion • Flu-like symptoms: – Hyperthermia(>36oC), muscle cramps, nausea, malaise, tachycardia – Hypernatremia (sweating)/Hyponatremia ( excessive water consumption) • No neurologic impairment • Treatment: volume/electrolyte repletion Slide 30 Heat Stroke • Extremely elevated body temp (>41oC) • Neurologic dysfunction Severe volume depletion, hypotensive, multiorgan failure, rhabodmyolysis, acute renal failure, DIC, transaminitits • Anhidrosis • Classic Type • Exertional Type Slide 31 Heat Stroke Treatment • Volume and electrolyte repletion • Immediate cooling – External cooling: ice pack to groin, axilla, ice to neck, chest; cooling blankets – Evaporative cooling: spray skin with cool water and fan; will decrease temp by 0.3oC/min – Internal cooling: cold water lavage to stomach, bladder, rectum Slide 32 Drug-Induced Hyperthermia • Malignant Hyperthermia (MH) • Excessive calcium efflux from sarcoplasmic reticulum in response to halogenated inhalational agents • Results in uncoupling of oxidative phosphorylation with dramatically increased metabolic rate • Incidence: 1:15,000 episodes of general anesthesia • Affects 1:50,000 people • Autosomal dominant inheritence Slide 33 Malignant Hyperthermia • Signs • FIRST: sudden rise in end-tidal CO2 • Muscle rigidity • Hyperthermia • Depressed consciousness • Autonomic instability • Leads to: myonecrosis, rhabdomyolysis, acute renal failure Slide 34 Malignant Hyperthermia • Management – Discontinue anesthetic agent – DANTROLENE- blocks Ca++ efflux from S.R. • First: 1-2mg/kg IV bolus q15 min to max total 10mg/kg • Then: 1mg/kg IV (or 2mg/kg PO) QID x 3 days • Reduces mortality from 70% to 10% • Victims should wear ID band and family should be tested Slide 35 Neuroleptic Malignant Syndrome • Idiosyncratic drug reaction to usage or discontinuation of neuroleptic drugs that alter dopamine axis • Symptoms: hyperthermia, lead-pipe rigidity, altered mental status, autonomic instability • 20% mortality • 0.2%-1.9% incidence (of those on neuroleptics) • Most common: Haloperidol, Fluphenazine • No relationship to duration or dosage – Usually seen 24-72 hours after starting/ending drug Slide 36 NMS • Treatment • Discontinue offending new medication or resume dopaninergic therapy if recently stopped • Volume resuscitation • DANTROLENE: 2-3mg/kg/ IV q few hours to max total 10mg/kg/day • BROMOCRIPTINE: 2.5-10mg PO TID – Give with heparinization due to increased thromboembolism risk Slide 37 Serotonin Syndrome (SS) • Caused by overstimulation of serotonin receptors in CNS – Associated with SSRI, NMDA, amphetamine use • Exam: abrupt onset of altered mental status – Autonomic hyperactivity – Mydriasis, diaphoresis – Tachycardia, hypertension – Hyperthermia – Hyperkinesia, ↑DTR, rigidity, clonus (deep patellar, horizontal occular clonus) Slide 38 Serotonin Syndrome • Treatment • Discontinue medication • Benzodiazepine (control agitation, hyperkinesia) • Cyproheptadine (serotonin agonist) – Only for severe SS – Give 12mg PO/NG then 2mg PO q2h PRN symptoms • Neuromuscular paralysis (Vecuronium) • NO RESTRAINTS Slide 39 References • Jurkovich GJ. Environmental Cold-Induced Injury. Surg Clin N Am 2007;87(4):247-267. • Petrone P, Kuncir EJ, Asensio JA. Surgical management and stratagies in the treatment of hypothermia and cold injury. Emerg Med Clin N Am 2003;21:1165-1178. • Hall JB, Schmidt GA, Wood LDH. Principles of Critical Care 3rd Ed. The McGraw-Hill Companies, 2005. • Marino PL. The ICU Book, 3rd ed. New York: Lippincott Williams & Wilkins, 2007:697-712. Slide 40