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Query: UMLS:C0020672 (hypothermia)
17,327 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The sudden infant death syndrome (SIDS) remains a leading cause of death during the first year. The common epidemiological and pathological data which characterize SIDS include the curve for age at death (with 3 months as modal age), the stigmata of early maternal intrauterine injury, the seasonal predominance in winter, and the absence of an adequate cause of death at autopsy. Some data characterize risk factor subgroups: for example low socioeconomic level, environmental pollution, stress, and mistakes in baby care. Symptoms before death may be lacking, they may be common and non-specific, or rarely they may be acute, corresponding to "apparent life-threatening events" (ALTE). SIDS may be a magnesium-dependent disease of the transition from chemical to physical thermoregulation. This theory originates from a synthesis of our present knowledge of SIDS, maternal magnesium status, and thermoregulation in the baby. It is consistent with all the epidemiological and pathological prerequisites characterizing SIDS. It eliminates the hiatus between relatively minor thermal stress and induced lethal thermal stroke. Logical scepticism about the role of an implausible lethal superacute magnesium deficiency is no longer justified with regard to well established chronic marginal magnesium deficiency. Further experimental and clinical research will be interesting, i.e. ex vivo studies on brown adipose tissue (BAT) and magnesium deficiency under various conditions of thermal exposure. But even now the theory leads to three therapeutic consequences: (1) the need to define the importance of magnesium deficiency in diagnosis and treatment of ALTE; (2) an assessment of the use of new techniques of rewarming (i.e. extracorporeal circulation) in hypothermia cases to distinguish cot death from "apparent death"; (3) investigation of the prevention of SIDS with magnesium through a blinded and randomized multicentre prospective cooperative study of magnesium supplementation in pregnant and lactating women, followed not only in the mother, fetus, and neonate at birth, but also through the first year of life.
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PMID:Magnesium and thermoregulation. I. Newborn and infant. Is sudden infant death syndrome a magnesium-dependent disease of the transition from chemical to physical thermoregulation? 179 50

There is a lack of detailed knowledge of the pathophysiologic mechanisms initiated during and after rewarming. To study cardiac function after rewarming from hypothermia sodium pentobarbital anesthetized open chest-dogs were cooled to 25 degrees C and rewarmed. Myocardial blood flow was measured at different temperatures, and blood samples were drawn from the aorta and the coronary sinus for metabolic measurements. Mean aortic blood pressure (AOP) and aortic blood flow were recorded. Compared to precooling, AOP and heart rate were both significantly reduced during hypothermia. During rewarming stroke volume (SV) decreased significantly. At the end of rewarming AOP and SV were significantly lower than before cooling and myocardial blood flow, as well as oxygen and lactate uptake were only 50% of precooling levels. The present study demonstrated that hypothermia and rewarming depress cardiovascular function. Changes in peripheral vascular function, myocardial metabolism and contractility, may lead to the observed reduction in recovery upon rewarming.
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PMID:Hemodynamic and metabolic effects of hypothermia and rewarming. 181 79

Hypothermia retards cardiac contraction and prolongs the subphases of the cardiac cycle in varying degrees. Six anaesthetized beagle dogs were catheterized and cooled between ice bags until the aortic blood temperature was 25 degrees C and then rewarmed to normothermia. The speed of relaxation decreased to a half from its value in normothermia as indicated by the time constant of exponential isovolumic ventricular pressure fall and by the change in the negative dp/dt. It is suggested that retardation of relaxation is connected with temperature dependent changes in calcium kinetics. Decrease of cardiac output was mediated mainly by decreased stroke volume indicating sympathetic tone in spite of cold narcosis.
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PMID:Cardiac function in hypothermia. 181 82

It has been proposed that lithium ion desensitizes neuronal receptors that function via the inositol phospholipid signaling mechanism. We examined the effects of lithium chloride on the morphologic outcome after 5 minutes of cerebral ischemia induced in gerbils by occluding both common carotid arteries under brief halothane anesthesia. In three treated groups of 10 gerbils each, 5 meq/kg i.p. lithium chloride was given 2 days, 1 day, and 2 hours before ischemia; 2 hours before ischemia; or immediately after the end of ischemia. Corresponding control groups of nine or 10 gerbils each received equivalent volumes of saline injected at comparable times. All gerbils were perfusion-fixed 1 week later, and neuronal density of the hippocampal CA1 pyramidal cells was determined. Lithium induced very mild intraischemic systemic hypothermia, but postischemic hyperthermia developed in both treated and control groups. Neuronal densities were equal in corresponding groups. The results indicate that our regimen of lithium administration provides no benefit in survival of hippocampal neurons, and intraischemic hypothermia of less than 0.8 degrees C is not protective. Other strategies to inactivate the signal transduction system that is specific for excitatory neurotransmission should be evaluated.
Stroke 1991 Jan
PMID:Lithium ion does not protect brain against transient ischemia in gerbils. 184 49

From August 1984 through November 1988, 10 of 2,658 patients undergoing coronary artery bypass grafting had ascending aortic disease that was not amenable to proximal anastomoses for coronary bypass grafting. This was due to a calcified aorta in 6 and acute aortic dissection in 4. There were 5 male and 5 female patients with a mean age of 71 years. Cannulation site was the femoral artery in 5, ascending aorta in 3, and aortic arch in 2. Profound hypothermia and ventricular fibrillation, with no cross-clamp or cardioplegia, was used in 9 patients, and circulatory arrest in 1. In 8 patients a single internal mammary artery was used as the total inflow with a saphenous vein graft brought off the internal mammary artery to one or more distal left-sided coronary vessels. Bilateral internal mammary arteries were used in 2 other patients. Operative mortality was zero. There was one perioperative myocardial infarction and one transient stroke without sequelae. All patients have done well from 1 to 6 years postoperatively. These data support the use of internal mammary arteries as single or bilateral proximal conduits for other venoarterial bypass grafts when the aorta is extensively diseased either by calcification or dissection.
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PMID:Coronary bypass grafting with totally calcified or acutely dissected ascending aorta. 198 45

We investigated the effect of mild (34 degrees C) postischemic hypothermia on hippocampal neuronal damage in 43 rats as a function of the duration of forebrain ischemia. Two temperatures and two durations were investigated. In two normothermic groups ischemia lasted 8 (n = 15) and 12 (n = 10) minutes, respectively. In two hypothermic groups ischemia lasted 8 (n = 9) and 12 (n = 9) minutes, respectively, and was followed immediately by the lowering and maintenance of rectal temperature to 34 degrees C for 2 hours. Seven days after the ischemic insult, the rats were sacrificed and the brains were prepared for histologic analysis; the percentage of necrotic neurons among the total neuronal population in selected CA1/2 sectors of the hippocampus was determined. There was a significant decrease in the percentage of necrotic neurons in the central (77.5% versus 55.5%, p = 0.006) and lateral (62.5% versus 38.9%, p=0.005) areas and in the overall CA1/2 sector of the hippocampus (71.8% versus 52.2%, p = 0.008) for the 8-minute hypothermic group compared with the 8-minute normothermic group. In contrast, no differences were detected in any area of the hippocampus between the 12-minute normothermic and the 12-minute hypothermic groups (p = 0.29-0.49). Our data indicate that mild postischemic whole-body hypothermia ameliorates neuronal survival when ischemia lasts 8 minutes but not 12 minutes.
Stroke 1991 Jan
PMID:Mild hypothermic intervention after graded ischemic stress in rats. 198 71

The fear of cerebral complications after cardiopulmonary bypass in patients with heart disease and severe carotid artery disease has led many authors to suggest combined approaches in these patients. The pathogenetic mechanism for stroke is based partly on the stenotic narrowing of the carotid artery. A diameter reduction of 75% is frequently considered hemodynamically significant and indicative of an increased risk for neurological morbidity. We studied the cerebral blood flow in 7 patients undergoing coronary artery bypass grafting who also had severe bilateral carotid disease. The results were compared with the results in 17 patients without carotid disease who had bypass grafting. The cerebral blood flow was measured by xenon 133 washout technique before, during, and after cardiopulmonary bypass with moderate hypothermia. Acid-base regulation was according to the alpha-stat theory, and blood pressure was kept greater than 50 mm Hg. The cerebral blood flow levels (mL.100g-1.min-1) before, during, and after cardiopulmonary bypass in the study group (30 +/- 11, 31 +/- 8, 47 +/- 20) (mean +/- standard deviation) were almost identical to those in the control group (30 +/- 11, 28 +/- 8, 47 +/- 12). The cerebral blood flow levels for the left and right hemispheres in the group with carotid disease were comparable and within normal ranges. In 2 patients, slight differences were noted between hemispheres, and this finding may indicate an increased risk for ischemia. These patients, however, did not show any signs of postoperative deficit. The flow limitations of critical carotid stenoses do not seem to imply a risk for cerebral hypoperfusion if cardiopulmonary perfusion is performed in a controlled manner.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Cardiopulmonary perfusion and cerebral blood flow in bilateral carotid artery disease. 201 11

We subjected 10 New Zealand White rabbits to 10 minutes of global cerebral ischemia under either normothermic (37 degrees C) or moderately hypothermic (29 degrees C) conditions. Hippocampal concentrations of glutamate, aspartate, and glycine were monitored using in vivo microdialysis. Outcome was assessed by both neurological and neuropathologic criteria. Hypothermia afforded nearly complete protection from ischemic injury. Ischemia-induced increases in the concentrations of glutamate, aspartate, and glycine in the normothermic group (3, 12, and 3 times baseline) were strikingly attenuated in the hypothermic group. In addition, the prolonged postischemic elevation of glycine levels seen in the normothermic group was absent in the hypothermic group. These results suggest that the neuroprotective properties of hypothermia may reside, in part, in their ability to prevent increases in the extracellular concentrations of amino acids that enhance the activity of the N-methyl-D-aspartate receptor complex.
Stroke 1991 May
PMID:Hypothermia prevents ischemia-induced increases in hippocampal glycine concentrations in rabbits. 202 99

One hundred fifty seven consecutive octogenarians (mean age +/- standard deviation, 82.4 +/- 1.9 years) underwent coronary artery bypass grafting with hypothermia (mean temperature, 21.8 degrees +/- 1.8 degrees C), hyperkalemic cardioplegia, and cardiopulmonary bypass in a 9-year period. Sixty-six percent were male. Preoperatively, 115 patients (73%) were in New York Heart Association functional class IV, with the remainder being in either class III (23%) or class II (4%). Twenty percent of the patients had major complications including postoperative hemorrhage (15), sepsis (9), cerebrovascular accident (6), third-degree heart block (5), renal failure requiring dialysis (1), and pulmonary embolism (1). The 30-day or in-hospital mortality rate was 7.0%. Mean total hospital stay was 26.1 +/- 17.9 days. One-year and 5-year actuarial survival rates were 85% and 62%, respectively. Higher mortality was seen to be associated with New York Heart Association class IV, left ventricular ejection fraction less than 0.40, and lesser values for cardiac output and cardiac index. At the 6-month postoperative follow-up, 73% of the survivors reported that their general health had improved as compared with before operation. This experience demonstrates that for select octogenarians with unmanageable angina pectoris, coronary artery bypass grafting is an effective therapeutic option.
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PMID:Morbidity and mortality after coronary artery bypass in octogenarians. 203 31

Postanesthetic hypothermia is a common, significant, and costly problem in the PACU. The scope of the problem ranges from an adverse outcome for the patient to undue financial burden to the institution providing the care. All of these problems can be minimized or prevented with active warming therapy. From the quality assurance perspective, patient temperatures in the PACU should be measured and documented at appropriate intervals. When hypothermia is detected, even in a mild state, it ought to be assertively treated, particularly in the elderly or patients compromised by systemic disease. When hypothermia is encountered in a moderate to severe form, however, it should be recognized as a grave threat to the patient. Hypothermia has been associated with the most serious postanesthetic complications, including MI, congestive heart failure, respiratory failure, recurarization (reparalyzation), renarcotization, stroke, and bleeding. Inability to control variables makes it exceedingly difficult to identify the contribution of hypothermia to these forms of anesthesia-related morbidity and mortality, but it is undoubtedly significant. For this reason, failure to treat postanesthetic hypothermia is beginning to be recognized as a potential cause of action for a malpractice suit in the presence of an adverse anesthetic outcome. This article evaluates and compares the existing warming therapies with respect to effectiveness, safety, and cost. Fluid warmers, warmed cotton blankets, and infra-red warming devices show no effectiveness in treating hypothermia in the PACU. Only active warming, as characterized by the Bair Hugger warming system, succeeds. With respect to budgetary concerns, Convective Warming Therapy is less expensive to use than warmed cotton blanket treatment. Perioperative temperature management is an emerging science in nursing and medicine. The problem is as ancient as surgery and anesthesia, but the implications are only beginning to be appreciated. Analysis of the problem of hypothermia in terms of clinical and financial outcome are proceeding, with new studies appearing in the literature monthly. More investigation is indicated in the area of patient temperature regulation, which is likely to identify additional situations when active warming therapy is indicated, as a mechanism to protect patients during emergence from anesthesia and to insure cost-effective use of PACU time.
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PMID:Hypothermia in the PACU. 204 23


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