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Query: UMLS:C0020672 (
hypothermia
)
17,327
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Brain death is associated with loss of hypothalamic, pituitary and brain stem function resulting in apnea, bradycardia and hypotension, poikilothermia, and
diabetes insipidus
. In order to preserve body functions mechanical ventilation is continued with the aim to maintain an arterial partial pressure of oxygen of more than 100 mmHg. Previous fluid restrictions and the application of diuretics during the treatment of high intracranial pressure frequently result in dehydration. Progressive vasodilation may induce severe hypotension and fluid replacement with cristalloids and if necessary colloids may be called for until the central venous pressure reaches 10 cm H2O. Continuous substitution of potassium and the use of hypotonic solutions such as glucose 5% may avoid hypokalaemia and hypernatraemia, respectively. Inotropic support with dopamine (5-10 micrograms/kg.min) or adrenaline (0.01-0.1 micrograms/kg.min) may be needed to maintain normal mean arterial blood pressure (65 mmHg). Polyuria (5000 ml/24 h) can be treated by continuous intravenous infusion of antidiuretic hormone (0.5-2-10 U/h).
Hypothermia
must be prevented by warming all fluids (37 degrees C) and covering the patient with heat saving blankets.
...
PMID:[Management of the organ donor]. 128 68
A case of rabies was treated with intensive medical support. This led to a prolongation of life to 25 days. The neurologic progression of the disease was monitored clinically and with serial EEG. This prolonged course enabled us to witness and manage a wide variety of unusual complications including the adult respiratory distress syndrome,
hypothermia
, myocarditis, and
diabetes insipidus
. This report documents the clinical features, diagnostic problems, complications, and management.
...
PMID:Human rabies: clinical features, diagnosis, complications, and management. 275 80
A retrospective chart review was conducted of 26 organ donors to determine hemodynamic and metabolic derangements encountered and nursing requirements for donor organ maintenance. There were 15 boys and 11 girls with a mean age 6.57 +/- 5.46 years. Mean donor maintenance time was 10.5 +/- 6.7 hours. Cardiorespiratory derangements included hypotension in 16, hypertension in 6, arrhythmias in 17 (premature ventricular contraction in 4, bradycardia in 8, paroxysmal atrial tachycardia in 3, and ventricular tachycardia in 2), asystolic events in 5, pulmonary insufficiency in 6, anemia in 8, and thrombocytopenia in 8. Metabolic and hormonal derangements included hyperglycemia in 18, hypokalemia in 20, hyperkalemia in 4, hyponatremia in 3, hypernatremia in 17, metabolic acidosis in 10, and
diabetes insipidus
in 15.
Hypothermia
(temperature 33.3 degrees +/- 0.4 degrees C, mean +/- SD) occurred in 14 donors. The mean physiologic Stability Index score was 22.2 +/- 4.7 and mean Therapeutic Intervention Score was 46.7 +/- 5.8. Total number of nursing hours spent in donor maintenance was 424.5 hours. Therapies offered included diuretics in 10, sodium bicarbonate in 8, antibiotics in 6, insulin in 12, pitressin in 13, verapamil in 3, isoproterenol in 3, dopamine in 17, and intravenous potassium boluses in 14. Of the potential 26 donors, 46 kidneys, 8 hearts, 14 livers, 3 pancreas, and 9 corneas were retrieved in transplantable condition. With appropriate donor maintenance, organs suitable for transplantation can be retrieved despite significant pathophysiologic derangements. Physicians intending to provide donor support should be comfortable with invasive monitoring and cardiorespiratory support and be prepared to provide a nurse to patient ratio of 2:1 at the bedside.
...
PMID:Pediatric organ donor maintenance: pathophysiologic derangements and nursing requirements. 278 Jan 31
A case of postoperative coma associated with
diabetes insipidus
and
hypothermia
is presented. Some recommendations are offered for the future management of similar cases.
...
PMID:Delayed recovery from general anaesthesia. 280 32
A boy referred at the age of 4 years because of obesity and under observation for 16 years, was found to be suffering from a hypothalamic syndrome of unknown origin characterized by progressive obesity, polyphagia, deficiency of growth and thyroid hormone, hyperprolactinemia, hypodipsia, hypernatremia and hyperosmolality without
diabetes insipidus
. At ages 11 and 16 there were 3 day episodes of spontaneous muscular weakness, hypersomnolence and
hypothermia
associated with central sleep apnea and severe bradycardia. Subsequently, decreased ventilatory responsiveness to carbon dioxide (CO2) was found as a consequence of blunted neural drive. Therapy with clomipramine HCl (Anafranil Ciba-Geigy) for 6 months led to a normalization of serum sodium levels, pulse rate, ventilatory response to dioxide with no recurrence of the central apnea within 4 following years.
...
PMID:Recurrent hypothermia, hypersomnolence, central sleep apnea, hypodipsia, hypernatremia, hypothyroidism, hyperprolactinemia and growth hormone deficiency in a boy--treatment with clomipramine. 346 79
The nurse is never "too prepared" when caring for the multiple organ donor. Some the many complications encountered include tachycardia, hyper/hypotension, hyper/
hypothermia
,
diabetes insipidus
, critical fluid and electrolyte imbalances, and hypoxia these are a result of brain stem herniation where the medulla herniates into the foramen magnum eventually leading to decreased cardiac output, impaired gas exchange, and impaired tissue perfusion if managed inappropriately. The challenge is on! Drug and fluid resuscitation have firm limits and guidelines which are of great importance to retrieval and transplant teams, and most of all, the recipient of the optimally perfused organ. Once the diagnosis of brain death is confirmed, the family is approached concerning their decision to donate. Psycho-emotional support of donor families is of upmost importance and you, the nurse, may call upon clergy, hospice, social services, or the transplant coordinator to assist. The organ procurement process involves the nurse, the transplant coordinator, and the physician. Since it is the nurse who will be "standing vigil" at the client's bedside, the very important role of anticipating the potential problems is crucial and this cannot be achieved unless we have a sound knowledge in the pathophysiology of central herniation.
...
PMID:Management of multi organ donor. 762 39
Using an illustrative case of severe closed head injury that resulted in a posterior fossa epidural hematoma (EDH) and supratentorial epidural/subdural hematomas (SDH), the massive blood losses associated with operative repair of the torn sigmoid sinus and the significant fluid losses associated with refractory
diabetes insipidus
were treated by the intraoperative use of the Rapid Infusion System (RIS, Haemonetics). The RIS can rapidly infuse warm blood, crystalloid, or colloid at rates up to 1.5 L/min, thereby limiting the commonly associated hypotension,
hypothermia
, and coagulopathies. During the suboccipital craniectomy for evacuation of the EDH and repair of the sigmoid sinus, the patient required 18 units of blood replacement secondary to a large tear in the sigmoid sinus. During a separate craniotomy for evacuation of the SDH, the patient also developed
diabetes insipidus
, which increased the operative fluid replacement to 39 L. Despite these massive blood and fluid losses, the RIS limited the hypotension to less than 2 min and prevented
hypothermia
and the frequently associated coagulopathies. When used in a neurosurgical setting associated with massive blood and/or fluid losses, the RIS accomplishes three important objectives: (1) rapid infusion of intravenous fluids for maintaining perfusion pressure, (2) rapid warming of fluids despite high intravenous infusion rates of cold crystalloids, thereby preventing intraoperative
hypothermia
, and (3) continuous monitoring of infusion rates and totals.
...
PMID:Rapid infusion system for neurosurgical treatment of massive intraoperative hemorrhage. 786 53
Therapeutic
hypothermia
may improve outcome after severe head injury, but its efficacy has not been established in children with a severe head injury. The authors evaluated the effects of hypothemia (33-34 degrees C) in 9 severely closed head-injured children (under 16 years old). The cooling period was 3 to 21 days (mean 9.3).
Hypothermia
significantly reduced ICP when it reached 33-34 degrees C. From 3 to 6 months after injury, 6 (67%) of the 9 patients had good outcome (good recovery in 2 and moderate disability in 4), but 3 (33%) had poor outcome (severe disability in 2 and vegetative state in one). Complications, including infectious disorders (pneumonia, meningitis, sepsis), cardio-vascular system dysfunction (cardiac arrhythmia, hypotension), decreased platelet counts, hypokalemia,
diabetes insipidus
, acute pancreatitis occurred during
hypothermia
in 7 patients (78%). The results of this study suggest that treatment with
hypothermia
in children with severe head injury is often accompanied complications, but it is an effective method to control intracranial hypertension and may have improved the outcome.
...
PMID:[Clinical analysis of hypothermia in children with severe head injury]. 1112 94
We sought to examine the frequency of brain death in the ICU, the donation rate, and the problems encountered during donor management between the years of January 2000, the date we began treating patients with neurologic pathologies and traumatic brain injury, and March 2003. Between January 2000 and March 2003, 134 patients diagnosed with brain death in our ICU were studied prospectively for the reason of brain death, the time between admission to ICU, and the diagnosis of brain death, the frequency of
diabetes insipidus
, the inotrope requirement,
hypothermia
, electrolyte imbalance, arrhythmia, and cardiac arrest. Among the approximately 2600 patients admitted to the general 24-bed ICU, 940 had cerebral injuries. In this group, the mortality rate was 33.5% (315 out of 940 patients) including brain-dead patients. Donor care was performed in 94 patients with organs suitable for transplantation out of 134 brain-dead patients. Fifty (53.2%) out of 94 patients became organ donors. The donor ratio was 12 per million-population per year as a mean value of the study period, which was approximately 10 times higher than the average ratio in Turkey. Although we observed many life-threatening problems during donor management, none of these patients died or had acute organ dysfunction.
...
PMID:Brain death and donor management in the intensive care unit: experiences over the last 3 years. 1501 89
We describe a case of traumatic panhypopituitarism following head injury. Generally considered, posttraumatic hypopituitarism occurs in patients who have suffered from severe head injury. However there were a few case reports of panhypopituitarism due to mild and moderate head injury. A 51-year-old male presented with a history of blunt head injury caused by a concrete block hitting his head directly during work. On admission, initial Glasgow Coma Scale was 14. Open depressed skull fracture was suspected. Emergency craniectomy and debridement were performed. Ten days after surgery,
hypothermia
, lethargy and appetite loss were manifested. Endocrinological examination showed panhypopituitarism with
diabetes insipidus
. MRI revealed ruptured pituitary stalk and pituitary gland hemorrhage. Coronal and sagittal MRI was helpful for the diagnosis of traumatic panhypopituitarism. General condition was recovered by hormone replacement therapy. It is important for medical staff carefully to observe vital signs and clinical symptoms, even if mild brain injury. Pituitary function test should also be undergone, if panhypopituitarism was suspected from clinical condition.
...
PMID:[Traumatic panhypopituitarism: case report]. 1668 92
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