| Literature DB >> 27633781 |
Peter Paal1,2,3, Les Gordon4,5, Giacomo Strapazzon6,7, Monika Brodmann Maeder6,7,8, Gabriel Putzer9, Beat Walpoth10, Michael Wanscher11, Doug Brown6,12, Michael Holzer13, Gregor Broessner14, Hermann Brugger9,7.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: This paper provides an up-to-date review of the management and outcome of accidental hypothermia patients with and without cardiac arrest.Entities:
Keywords: Cardiopulmonary bypass; Cardiopulmonary resuscitation; Emergency medicine; Extracorporeal membrane oxygenation; Hypothermia; Resuscitation
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27633781 PMCID: PMC5025630 DOI: 10.1186/s13049-016-0303-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Scand J Trauma Resusc Emerg Med ISSN: 1757-7241 Impact factor: 2.953
Fig. 1Management in Accidental Hypothermia. (*) Decapitation; truncal transection; whole body decomposed or whole body frozen solid (chest wall not compressible) [128]. (†) SBP <90 mmHg is a reasonable prehospital estimate of cardiac instability but for in-hospital decisions, the minimum sufficient circulation for a deeply hypothermic patient (e.g., <28 °C) has not been defined. (‡) Swiss staging of accidental hypothermia [73], see also Table 1. (§) In remote areas, transport decisions should balance the risk of increased transport time with the potential benefit of treatment in an ECLS centre. (||) Warm environment, chemical, electrical, or forced air heating packs or blankets, and warm IV fluids (38–42 °C). In case of cardiac instability refractory to medical management, consider rewarming with ECLS. (¶) If the decision is made to stop at an intermediate hospital to measure serum potassium, a hospital en route towards the ECLS centre should be chosen. (**) See Table 3. CPR denotes cardiopulmonary resuscitation, DNR do-not-resuscitate, ECLS extracorporeal life support, HT hypothermia, MD medical doctor, ROSC return of spontaneous circulation, SBP systolic blood pressure
Staging of accidental hypothermia [73]
| Stage | Clinical findings | Core temperature (°C) (if available) |
|---|---|---|
| Hypothermia I (mild) | Conscious, shiveringa | 35–32 °C |
| Hypothermia II (moderate) | Impaired consciousnessa; may or may not be shivering | <32–28 °C |
| Hypothermia III (severe) | Unconsciousa; vital signs present | <28 °C |
| Hypothermia IV (severe) | Apparent death; Vital signs absent | Variableb |
aShivering and consciousness may be impaired by comorbid illness (i.e. trauma, CNS pathology, toxic ingestion, etc.) or drugs (i.e. sedatives, muscle relaxants, narcotics etc.) independent of core temperature
The lowest temperature from which successful resuscitation and rewarming has been achieved is currently 13.7 °C [11] for accidental hypothermia and 9 °C for induced hypothermia [12]. This does not preclude resuscitation attempts at even lower temperatures if clinical judgment suggests the possibility of successful resuscitation
bThe risk of cardiac arrest increases below 32 °C, but as it is unlikely to be due solely to hypothermia until the temperature is <28 °C, alternative causes should be considered. Some patients still have vital signs <24 °C and the lowest reported temperature of a patient with vital signs is 17 °C [232, 233]
Rewarming techniques in accidental hypothermia
| Rewarming technique | Rewarming rate | Notes & controversies | Rewarming complications |
|---|---|---|---|
| PASSIVE REWARMING [ | |||
| Passive rewarming | 0.5–4 °C hr-1 (dependent upon patient’s thermoregulatory function and metabolic reserves) [ | Protect from further heat loss and allow patient to self-rewarm. Minimal controversy for mild hypothermia if the patient is able to self-rewarm. | Negligible in isolated mild hypothermia. For colder patients and those with secondary hypothermia or comorbid illness, there may be morbidity associated with a prolonged rewarming process if the patient has poor tolerance for the hypothermia-induced organ dysfunction (i.e. hypotension, coagulopathy, arrhythmias, impaired cellular function etc.). |
| Passive rewarming with active movement | 1–5 °C hr-1 | Exercise has been shown to increase afterdrop in physiology studies from ~0.3 °C in controls to ~1 °C in exercised subjects, however the exercised subjects rewarmed more quickly [ | No reported complications. Some authors highlight the theoretical risk that the slightly increased afterdrop could contribute to morbidity and mortality. No adverse events were noted [ |
| ACTIVE EXTERNAL REWARMING | |||
| Active rewarming e.g. forced air surface [ | 0.5-4 °C hr-1 | Protect from further heat loss, deliver external heat and (if required) warmed IV fluids. Minimal controversies. | Similar to passive rewarming. |
| ACTIVE INTERNAL REWARMING | |||
| Bladder lavage | Variable. Adds ~0.5–1 °C hr-1 | Helpful if rewarming rate is slow. Minimal controversies. Rewarming is intermittent & slow because of small surface area. Poor control of infusate temperature [ | Negligible unless difficult catheterization. |
| Gastric lavage | Adds ~0.5–1 °C hr-1 | Not commonly used due to risk vs. benefit ratio [ | Potential for aspiration, fluid & electrolyte shifts. |
| Intravascular catheter rewarming e.g. Icy® catheter (CoolGuard®) [ | Device specific (adds ~0.5–2.5 °C hr-1) | Uncertain indication for use, potential for benefit exists in colder and sicker co-morbid patients with stable circulation. | Potential for haemorrhage or thrombosis, potentially worsening hypotension in unstable patients. |
| Thoracic [ | Adds ~1–2 °C hr-1 | Not commonly used unless patient is unstable and ECLS rewarming is not available. | Potential for haemorrhage, lung or bowel trauma, fluid & electrolyte shifts. Thoracic lavage has the potential to impair CPR quality. |
| Continuous venovenous haemofiltration [ | Adds ~1.5–3 °C hr-1 | Not commonly used unless ECLS rewarming not available. Requires adequate blood pressure. Heparinisation required. | Problems rare. Local vascular complications. Air embolism. Hypotension. |
| Haemodialysis [ | Adds ~2–3 °C hr-1 | Not commonly used, patient must be able to increase cardiac output to perfuse the external circuit. Heparinisation required. | Potential for hypotension, haemorrhage, thrombosis, haemolysis, etc. |
| Veno-venous rewarming (usually with an ECMO circuit) [ | ~4–10 °C hr-1 | Not commonly used. Provides no circulatory or ventilatory support in case of cardiac arrest. Patient must be able to increase cardiac output to provide circuit perfusion. | Potential for hypotension, haemorrhage, thrombosis, haemolysis, etc. |
| Extra-corporeal life support (VA-ECMO or CPB) | ~4–10 °C hr-1 | Preferred rewarming method for patients in cardiac arrest. CPB can use femoral route avoiding need for sternotomy [ | Potential for haemorrhage, thrombosis, haemolysis, etc. (as with all intravascular devices). |
The most extreme reported accidental hypothermia cases
| Longest no flow time | 42-year-old male, found in crevasse, 7 m under snow, no vital signs, CPR started only after 70 min in hospital when patient was asystolic, 19 °C core temperature, ECLS rewarming, full recovery [ |
| Longest manual CPR | 42-year-old male, found outdoors. Developed asystole just after discovery, CPR started, 23.2 °C, 6 h and 30 min CPR. Rewarmed with non-ECLS methods until ROSC. Full recovery [ |
| Longest mechanical CPR | 42-year-old female, found unconscious in her apartment. VF arrest during evacuation to hospital. Manual CPR started and this was changed to mechanical CPR on arrival at hospital. Minimal temperature 24 °C. 80 min mechanical CPR while the patient was rewarmed noninvasively [ |
| Longest total resuscitation | 65-year-old female went missing and was found on a snow-covered riverbank. Initially 28 °C (rectal) but dropped to 20.8 °C. Asystole. Resuscitation was CPR (4 h 48 m) and ECLS (3 h 52 m). Total resuscitation time was 8 h 40 min [ |
| Lowest survived body core temperature | 29-year-old female, fell into water fall gully, flooded by icy water but able to breathe. Lifeless for approx. 45 min, CPR started after rescue, at hospital admission 13.7 °C and K+ of 4.3 mmol L-1, ECLS rewarming, full recovery [ |
| Longest persisting VF | 42-year-old male, found outdoor, CPR started, repeated shocks, hospital transfer, 22 °C, ECLS rewarming started at 130 min CPR and after 38 shocks, successful shock at 30 °C, full recovery [ |
| Longest intermittent CPR | 57-year-old female, witnessed cardiac arrest in French Alps at 2000 m altitude in a snowstorm; transport distance to EMS vehicle of 1.1 km, 122 m difference in height; 1 min CPR alternating with 1 min walking for 25 min, 5 h CPR, ECLS rewarming, full recovery [ |
| Longest submersion | 2.5-year-old, submersion in cold water for at least 66 min, 19 °C, ECLS rewarming, full recovery [ |
| Longest survival in an avalanche | Female, core temperature <32 °C, when found somnolent, disorientated. 1st- 2nd degree frost bites on hand and feet, no injuries, 43 h and 45 min [ |
| Longest time in an avalanche indoor | Thirteen days entrapped in a house which in part collapsed after being hit by an avalanche, Heiligenblut, Austria [ |
| Lowest temperature with vital signs | Male age 3 years. ECG showed very irregular rhythm 8–10/min. Rectal temperature recorded about 20 min after arrival at the hospital was 17 °C [ |
| Highest survived potassium in an avalanche victim | Avalanche victim, 6.4 mmol L-1, survived; core temperature and neurological outcome are not reported [ |
| Highest survived potassium in an adult | 34 year old female, 20 °C, cold environment exposure, asystole, 7.9 mmol L-1, ECLS rewarming, survived. Neurologic outcome not reported [ |
| Highest potassium in an accidentally hypothermic patient | 7 -year-old and, cold water submersion, 11.3 mmol L-1 [ |
| Longest time in a crevasse | 27 -year-old male, 8 days, good outcome, no temperature or other specific details reported [ |
| Largest number of simultaneous cases of accidental hypothermia with cardiac arrest | 15 healthy subjects age 15–45 years were immersed in 2 °C salt water. Seven victims were recovered in circulatory arrest with a median temperature of 18.4 °C. They were rewarmed with ECMO and were subsequently evaluated with advanced neuroradiological and functional testing. All were successfully resuscitated [ |
Fig. 2Delayed and intermittent CPR in in hypothermic patients when continuous CPR is not possible during difficult rescue missions [9]
Main physiological effects of severe hypothermia
| System | Parameter | Clinical implications |
|---|---|---|
| CARDIOVASCULAR [ | • Initial vasoconstriction (effect blocked by ethanol). Vasoconstriction fails <24 °C [ | • Failed vasoconstriction means the patient becomes poikilothermic i.e. dependent on ambient temperature. |
| • Cardiac conduction is affected by cold and changes in pH and PaO2 [ | • Bradycardia is atropine unresponsive [ | |
| • Cardiac output falls to 45 % at 25 °C [ | • Hypotension is the norm. | |
| • After rewarming, mean arterial pressure, contractility, and cardiac output are decreased, especially if alcohol ingested before cooling [ | • More prolonged depression of cardiac function after rewarming | |
| CENTRAL NERVOUS SYSTEM | • Reflexes become increasingly sluggish as body temperature falls and become absent ≈ 28–30 °C [ | • The level of consciousness should be consistent with the core temperature. A significant discrepancy suggests an alternative diagnosis. |
| RESPIRATORY | • Tidal volume, respiratory rate, pulmonary compliance and thoracic elasticity decrease [ | • An irregular respiratory pattern can be mistaken for agonal breathing leading to premature institution of CPR. |
| • Oxygen consumption and carbon dioxide production fall by about 50 % at 30 °C [ | • Reduced CO2 production means it is easy to inadvertently hyperventilate hypothermic patients. Hyperoxia is also possible. | |
| RENAL & METABOLIC | • Cold diuresis, partly due to the relative central hypervolaemia resulting from peripheral vasoconstriction [ | • Severely hypothermic patients are dehydrated. This becomes particularly important during rewarming as the consequent opening up of the peripheral circulation will lead to a rapid fall in BP. |
| • Hyperglycaemia is common due to catecholamine-induced glycogenolysis, decreased insulin release and inhibition of insulin transport [ | • Hyperglycaemia can exacerbate the diuresis. | |
| • Glomerular filtration rate falls as cardiac output and hence renal blood flow fall [ | • This makes the interpretation of acid-base more complex. | |
| • Hypokalaemia commonly occurs with hypothermia [ | • If potassium replacement is given excess to the losses, hyperkalaemia may occur on rewarming [ | |
| HAEMATOLOGY | • Haematocrit increases by about 2 % for every 1 °C decline in temperature [ | • A normal haematocrit in a moderately or severely hypothermic patient suggests pre-existing anaemia or blood loss [ |
| COAGULATION | • Platelet function and coagulation enzyme activity are reduced [ | • Coagulopathy is likely and increases with decreasing core temperature. At temperatures below 33 °C coagulopathy significantly increases mortality in patients with concomitant trauma [ |