| Literature DB >> 24860681 |
María Jesús Gómez Ramos1, Francisco Miguel González Valverde2, Carmen Sánchez Álvarez1, Lisa Ortin Katnich1, Francisco Pastor Quirante3.
Abstract
Objective. The case of a patient who developed a fatal post-exertional heat stroke is reported. Case Report. A 20-year-old man with a history of morbid obesity, hypertension, and schizophrenia was admitted to our intensive care unit because of multiorgan failure due to severe heat stroke. He had been working under the sun. Treatment included aggressive body cooling but, in spite of the best supportive care, the patient succumbed in a few hours. We concluded that the adverse event was possibly associated with his obesity and the use of antipsychotics. Histological evaluation revealed lesions consistent with severe hyperthermia and shock. Conclusions. Heat stroke is an uncommon clinical entity characterized by systemic heat and loss of the body's normal mechanisms for dealing with heat stress, such as sweating and temperature control. When heat stroke is diagnosed early and supportive care begins promptly the prognosis is optimal but it becomes a life-threatening disease when treatment is delayed. Lack of physical acclimatization and the use of certain medications that interfere with salt and water balance can impair thermoregulation under conditions of high environmental temperature. Health professionals must be adequately prepared to prevent, recognise, and treat them urgently.Entities:
Year: 2012 PMID: 24860681 PMCID: PMC4010046 DOI: 10.1155/2012/924328
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Case Rep Crit Care ISSN: 2090-6420
Figure 1Superficial burn blisters with epidermal loss on non-exposure areas.
Figure 2The lungs were heavily congested and hemorrhagic.
Figure 3Heart specimen showing acute subendocardial-myocardial infarction.
Conditons contributing to the risk of heat illness.
| Risk factors | Mechanism | |
|---|---|---|
| Physical conditions | Prolonged exertion | |
| Fever | ||
| Dehydration | ||
|
| ||
| Medications | Drugs of abuse: amphetamines, heroine, cocaine, LSD, ethanol. | Increase endogenous heat production |
| Anticholinergic: tricyclic antidepressants, antispasmodics and phenothiazides. | Disrupt hypothalamic function and reduce sweating | |
| Beta-adrenergic and Calcium channel blockers | Inhibit the compensatory increase in cardiac output | |
| Diuretics | Produce a relative state of dehydration that affects central thermoregulation and sweating | |
| Others: antiparkinsonian agents, antihistamines | ||
|
| ||
| Chronic illness | Cardiac conditions | |
| Cystic fibrosis | ||
| Extensive skin disease | ||
| Hyperthyroidism | ||
| Psychiatric conditions | ||
|
| ||
| Older age | ||
| Characteristic | Classic | Exertional |
|---|---|---|
| Health condition | Predisposing factors | Healthy |
| Age | Elderly | Younger |
| Conditions | High environmental temp | Occurs sporadically |
| Sweating | Usually absent | Present |
| Activity | Sedentary | Strenuous |
| Disseminated intravascular coagulation | Mild | Marked |
| Acute renal failure | <5% patients | 25–30% patients |
| Lactic acidosis | Rare | Common |
| Hyperuricemia | Moderate | Severe |
| Hypocalcemia | Rare | Common |
| Hypoglycaemia | Rare | Common |
| Hypokalemia | Rare | Common |
| Rhabdomyolysis | Rare | Common |
| CPK | Mildly elevated | Marked elevated |
| Mechanism | Poor dissipation of environmental heat | Excessive endogenous heat production |
Information from [3, 8].
Heat illness.
| Edema | Cramps | Tetany | Syncope | Exhaustion | Stroke | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Symptoms | Minimal clinical significance but important interstitial fluid accumulation | Cramps | Cramps, carpopedal spasm, and perioral and distal paresthesias | Nausea, sighing, yawning, restlessness, and orthostatic syncope | Flulike | Flulike |
| Central nervous | NO | NO | NO | NO | NO | Present |
| Temperature | <41°C | <41°C | <41°C | <41°C | <41°C | >41°C |
| Sweating | Present | Present | Present | Present | Present | Absent |
| Mechanism | Unacclimatisation, peripheral vasodilatation | Unacclimatisation and negative sodium balance | Unacclimatisation and severe negative sodium balance | Unacclimatisation, dehydration and inadequate cardiac output | Excess sweating in a hot humid environment causing volume depletion | Heat production exceeds dissipation |
| Treatment | Periodic exercise, elevation of the legs, or diuretic medication | Oral sodium replacement | Oral or parenteral sodium replacement | Placing supine position, and replacing water deficit | Cool area to rest, placing supine position and replacing water deficit | Emergency treatment |