| Literature DB >> 29850022 |
Toru Hifumi1,2, Yutaka Kondo3, Keiki Shimizu4, Yasufumi Miyake5.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Heat stroke is a life-threatening injury requiring neurocritical care; however, heat stroke has not been completely examined due to several possible reasons, such as no universally accepted definition or classification, and the occurrence of heat wave victims every few years. Thus, in this review, we elucidate the definition/classification, pathophysiology, and prognostic factors related to heat stroke and also summarize the results of current studies regarding the management of heat stroke, including the use of intravascular balloon catheter system, blood purification therapy, continuous electroencephalogram monitoring, and anticoagulation therapy. MAIN BODY: Two systems for the definition/classification of heat stroke are available, namely Bouchama's definition and the Japanese Association for Acute Medicine criteria. According to the detailed analysis of risk factors, prevention strategies for heat stroke, such as air conditioner use, are important. Moreover, hematological, cardiovascular, neurological, and renal dysfunctions on admission are associated with high mortality, which thus represent the potential targets for intensive and specific therapies for patients with heat stroke. No prospective, comparable study has confirmed the efficacy of intravascular cooling devices, anticoagulation, or blood purification in heat stroke.Entities:
Keywords: Anticoagulation; Blood purification therapy; Core body temperature; Heat stroke; Intravascular cooling; JAAM criteria
Year: 2018 PMID: 29850022 PMCID: PMC5964884 DOI: 10.1186/s40560-018-0298-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Intensive Care ISSN: 2052-0492
Fig. 1Japanese Association of Acute Medicine Heat-Related Illness criteria. DIC, disseminated intravascular coagulation; JCS, Japan Coma Scale
Comparison of Bouchama’s definition and the JAAM criteria for heat stroke
| Bouchama’s definition | JAAM criteria | JAAM-HS-WG criteria | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Environment | Exposure to environmental heat (classic heat stroke) | Exposure to high environmental temperature | ||
| Body temperature | Core body temperature > 40 °C |
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| |
| Organ dysfunction | Central nervous system | Delirium, convulsions, or coma | Impaired consciousness JCS ≥ 2, cerebellar symptoms, convulsive seizures | GCS score ≤ 14 |
| Coagulation |
| Diagnosed as DIC by JAAM | JAAM DIC score ≥ 4 | |
| Liver |
| Follow-up after admission to hospital, hepatic or renal impairments requiring inpatient hospital care | Creatinine or total bilirubin levels ≥ 1.2 mg/dL | |
| Renal |
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| Cardiovascular |
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| Respiratory |
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GCS Glasgow Coma Scale, JAAM Japanese Association of Acute Medicine, JAAM-HS-WG Japanese Association of Acute Medicine heat stroke committee working group, JCS Japan Coma Scale, DIC disseminated intravascular coagulation
Prognostic factors
| Study | Country | Patients | Number of patients | Outcomes | Factors |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Hausfater et al. [ | France | Nonexertional heatstroke (core body temperature > 38.5 °C) | 1456 | 1-year mortality | Previous treatment with diuretics, living in an institution, age > 80 years, presence of cardiac disease or cancer, core body temperature > 40 °C, SBP < 100 mmHg, GCS score < 12, and transportation to hospital in ambulance |
| Argaud et al. [ | France | Nonexertional heatstroke (core body temperature > 40 °C) | 83 | 2-year mortality | Living at an institution, the use of long-term antihypertensive medication, presence of anuria, coma, or cardiovascular failure at admission |
| Misset et al. [ | France | Heat stroke in Bouchama’s definition | 345 | Hospital death | At home or in a healthcare facility (vs. in a public location), high SAPS II score, initial high body temperature, prolonged prothrombin time and the use of vasoactive drugs within the first day in ICU, and patient management in an ICU without air conditioning |
| Tsuruta et al. [ | Japan | Mechanically ventilated heat-related illness in JAAM-HS criteria | 77 | Poor outcome (death and incidence of sequelae) | SBP, SpO2 at scene, and arterial base excess |
| Hifumi et al. [ | Japan | Heat stroke in JAAM-HS-WG criteria | 705 | Hospital death | SBP, GCS score, serum creatinine levels, and presence of DIC |
JAAM-HS-WG Japanese Association of Acute Medicine heat stroke committee working group, SBP systolic blood pressure, GCS Glasgow Coma Scale, SAPS II Simplified Acute Physiology Score II score, DIC disseminated intravascular coagulation, ICU intensive care unit