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Query: UMLS:C0020672 (hypothermia)
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From 1975 to 1978, ten patients were on long-term hemodialysis due to acute barbiturate intoxication. Duration of hemodialysis varied from 16 to 40 hours (mean 23 +/- 9.4 hours). Phenobarbital was the most common type of barbiturate ingested (6 out of 10 patients), and diazepam the drug most frequently taken in association with barbiturates (3 out of 10 patients). All patients were in a state of deep unconsciousness (coma II: 1 case; coma III: 5 cases; coma IV: 4 cases), and all of them required endotracheal intubation. Seven patients needed the assistance of automatic intermittent positive-pressure respirator. Two patients presented hypothermia, and another a peripheral collapse. Long-term hemodialysis was well tolerated without major complications. Significant decreases of barbiturate levels were obtained in all cases (before hemodialysis: 7.3 +/- 1.9 mg/dl, after hemodialysis: 1.8 +/- 1.2 md/dl, corresponding to the pattern of secobarbital used to refer the results). No correlation was observed between initial levels of barbiturates and number of hours of long-term hemodialysis required. Neurologic symptoms improved in all cases. Eight patients were conscious after hemodialysis had been discontinued, and only two patients remained unconscious (coma I). Intratracheal tube could be removed in six patients, but positive-pressure respirator could be took away from all cases. Complete recovery was achieved in eight patients. Two patients died on the 2nd. and 8th. postdialysis days due to respiratory distress. Long-term hemodialysis has proven of value in the treatment of severe barbiturate intoxication, particularly better to conventional hemodialysis.
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PMID:[Long-term hemodialysis in acute barbiturate intoxication (author's transl)]. 740 33

Accidental hypothermia has a mortality rate of 30-80% and should always be borne in mind with comatose, hypotensive patients. It is a preventable condition when adequate safety measures are ensured. One should act in the case of early symptoms, because collapse may soon follow and evacuation of a patient on a stretcher is time-consuming, dangerous and a major undertaking. In severe cases absence of respiration and circulation should not preclude resuscitation. Resuscitation should be continued until the patient is warm and all biochemical abnormalities have been corrected and intoxication has been ruled out. Resuscitation may be successful in primitive, adverse conditions, as illustrated by this case of a 13-year-old boy with cardiopulmonary arrest and a core temperature of only 25 degrees C, who was successfully reanimated.
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PMID:Successful resuscitation in severe accidental hypothermia: a case report. 740 88

Accidental hypothermia, a core temperature below 34 degrees C., is frequently fatal, particularly in the ill and elderly. Traditional treatment methods result in reported mortalities of between 45 and 100 per cent. Despite these terrible statistics, advocates of slow rewarming persist. They cite the shock and vascular collapse which can occur with peripheral dilation as reasons to avoid rapid external rewarming. Isolated successes using internal core rewarming, such as hemodialysis or cardiopulmonary bypass, are spectacular but not practical in the usual clinical situation. By combining methods used for the resuscitation of burn injury with the treatment principles for frostbite, a highly effective treatment protocol results. Agressive fluid resuscitation, rapid immersion rewarming and careful systematic monitoring have been used to treat ten consecutive patients without a single death. Concomitant problems of alcoholism, stroke, myxedema, tuberculosis and paraplegia were also treated. Rapid external rewarming by immersion can result in a low mortality in patients with severe hypothermia.
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PMID:Accidental hypothermia treated without mortality. 740 8

The intravascular administration and the high blood resorption of local anesthetic agents are known to induce neurotoxic accidents. However, the use of potent local anesthetic drugs such as bupivacaine is responsible for serious cardiotoxic accidents with a mortality of about 50%. Indeed, bupivacaine induces both electrophysiologic and haemodynamic disturbances with the occurrence of conduction blocks, arrhythmias and cardiovascular collapse. Moreover, cardiotoxicity is worsened by: bupivacaine-induced sympathetic activation which facilitates tachycardia and arrhythmias, metabolic abnormalities such as hypoxia, acidosis, hyperkaliemia and hypothermia, pregnancy, diazepam pretreatment, and the antiarrhythmic drugs. In case of cardiac arrest, CPR must be made. In the other cases, the first treatment is to oxygenate, to intubate the trachea and to ventilate the lungs, and then to stop convulsions. Specific cardiac resuscitation remains controversial because it is based principally on experimental results. We demonstrated that the combination of clonidine and dobutamine is efficient to reverse both haemodynamic and electrophysiologic impairments induced by a large dose of bupivacaine in anesthetized dogs. Whatever the efficiency of specific resuscitation, it must be emphasized that prevention of toxic accident must always include: the best choice of local anesthetic drug (e.g.: lidocaine+alpha-2 agonist vs bupivacaine), test dose, aspiration and slow administration. Finally, the monitoring of regional anaesthesia must be similar to that in use for general anaesthesia and drugs and devices for resuscitation must be ready.
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PMID:[Cardiotoxicity of local anesthetics]. 828 99

Deep Hypothermia and Circulatory Arrest (DHCA) is widely used to repair complex congenital heart lesions in children. We report our experience of DHCA in seven patients of transverse aortic arch aneurysm repair. Anaesthesia consisted of Nitrous Oxide, Oxygen, morphine 1 to 1.5 mg kg-1, halothane and pancuronium. Core cooling on cardiopulmonary bypass was used. At 19 +/- 0.64 degrees C (rectal) temperature, Total Circulatory Arrest (TCA) was established. Thiopentone 30 mg.kg-1 and hydrocortisone hemisuccinate 400 mg was administered before arrest. Head was packed with ice during cooling and patients were placed in steep Trendelenberg's position before opening the aneurysm sac. Mean cardiopulmonary bypass time was 151.4 +/- 8.7 minutes. Mean duration of circulatory arrest was 38.6 +/- 6.9 minutes (range, 15 to 77 minutes). Permanent neurological deficit was found in two patients. Tracheostomy was performed in one of these patients for prolonged ventilation. Two patients died of persistent bleeding, low cardiac output and hypoxia due to right lung collapse.
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PMID:Transverse aortic arch aneurysms--a challenge ahead. 831 75

A 60-year-old man with renal cell carcinoma extending through inferior vena cava into the right atrium was scheduled for the removal of the right kidney under general anesthesia and the cardiopulmonary bypass technique. In order to obtain a clear operative field and to minimize the risk for pulmonary embolism of necrotizing tumor, total circulatory arrest under profound hypothermia (20 degrees C) was performed. Anesthesia was maintained with high doses of fentanyl (62 micrograms.kg-1), midazolam and supplemented with enflurane. We attempted to prevent circulatory collapse due to acute pulmonary embolism by tumor fragments during operation. The body temperature of the patient was decreased down to 20 degrees C for protecting central nervous system with the minimal damage. No complications occurred during anesthesia and the post-operative period. For the safe anesthetic management of the patient such as our case, adequate monitoring of circulation and protection of central nervous system are essential.
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PMID:[Anesthetic management of a patient with renal cell carcinoma extending into the right atrium]. 874 77

A 61-year-old man was hospitalized because of circulatory collapse due to postinfarction ventricular septal defect. As his hemodynamic condition deteriorated despite intraaortic counterpulsation, he underwent patch closure of VSP and patch reconstruction of the anterior left ventricular wall concomitant with coronary artery bypass grafting to the circumflex lesion immediately after admission. Femorofemoral circulatory assist with centrifugal pump was necessitated to wean from cardiopulmonary bypass because of severe left ventricular dysfunction. Circulatory assist was controlled to maintain mixed venous oxygen saturation of more than 70% under mild hypothermia. On the second postoperative day (POD), increased oxygen saturation from right atrium to pulmonary artery developed (Qp/Qs = 2.1). Further surgery was performed on an emergency basis for additional patch closure of VSP. Then he was successfully weaned from cardiopulmonary bypass successfully. The patient was extubated on the 14th POD and was ambulatory when he discharged on the 56th POD. Immediate surgical intervention should be performed for the patient with postinfarction ventricular septal defect when the hemodynamic state deteriorates under intraaortic counterpulsation.
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PMID:[Survival of a patient with postinfarction ventricular septal defect following venoarterial bypass with centrifugal pump and reoperation for residual shunt]. 882 29

The present experiments were carried out in the rat to investigate the peripheral vascular function prior to the development of posthypothermic circulatory collapse. In the first study, mean arterial blood pressure, heart rate, cardiac output, regional blood flow, and plasma volume of hypothermic (4 h, 15-13 degrees C) and rewarmed rats were compared with normothermic controls. In response to hypothermia, arterial blood pressure, heart rate, and cardiac output declined markedly. After rewarming, arterial blood pressure and heart rate recovered fully, whereas cardiac output was only 33 +/- 7% of the control value (p < 0.025). Tissue blood flow was markedly depressed during hypothermia (p < 0.025), except for the abdominal skin. After rewarming, blood flow in skeletal muscle returned to within control levels, whereas blood flow in internal organs remained low (p < 0.025 vs. control). Posthypothermic plasma volume was 77 +/- 3% of control (p < 0.05). In the second study, the transcapillary colloid osmotic pressure gradient (COPp-COPi) was calculated following measurement of colloid osmotic pressure in plasma (COPp) and interstitium (COPi) in prehypothermic, hypothermic, and posthypothermic rats. The posthypothermic value of COPp-COPi was 76 +/- 4% of the prehypothermic value (p < 0.05). In conclusion this study demonstrates that the reduced cardiac output in rewarmed rats is associated with an altered regional blood flow distribution compared with that of normal rats. Capillary integrity also seemed perturbed. Thus, changes in both control and function of the peripheral vasculature are important mechanisms in the development of a posthypothermic circulatory collapse.
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PMID:Changes in blood flow distribution and capillary function after deep hypothermia in rat. 882 84

Rewarming from accidental hypothermia is associated with fatal circulatory derangements. To investigate potential pathophysiological mechanisms involved, we examined heart function and metabolism in a rat model rewarmed after 4 h at 15-13 degrees C. Hypothermia resulted in a significant reduction of left ventricular (LV) systolic pressure, cardiac output, and heart rate, whereas stroke volume increased. The maximum rate of LV pressure rise decreased to 191 +/- 28 mmHg/s from a control value of 9,060 +/- 500 mmHg/s. Myocardial tissue content of ATP, ADP, and glycogen was significantly reduced, whereas lactate content remained unchanged. After rewarming, heart rate returned to control value, whereas LV systolic pressure, cardiac output, and stroke volume all remained significantly depressed. The posthypothermic maximum rate of LV pressure rise was 5,966 +/- 1.643 mmHg/s. The posthypothermic myocardial lactate content was significantly increased (to 13.3 +/- 3.2 nmol/mg from control value of 5.7 +/- 1.9 nmol/mg), and ATP and glycogen remained significantly lowered. Creatine phosphate or energy charge did not change significantly during the experiment. The finding of deteriorated myocardial mechanical function and a shift in energy metabolism shows that the heart could be an important target during hypothermia and rewarming in vivo, thus contributing to the development of a posthypothermic circulatory collapse.
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PMID:Experimental hypothermia and rewarming: changes in mechanical function and metabolism of rat hearts. 884 17

Many recreational and elite runners participate in distance races each year. When these events are conducted in hot or cold conditions, the risk of environmental illness increases. However, exertional hyperthermia, hypothermia, dehydration, and other related problems may be minimized with pre-event education and preparation. This position stand provides recommendations for the medical director and other race officials in the following areas: scheduling; organizing personnel, facilities, supplies, equipment, and communication; providing competitor education; measuring environmental stress; providing fluids; and avoiding potential legal liabilities. This document also describes the predisposing conditions, recognition, and treatment of the four most common environmental illnesses: heat exhaustion, heatstroke, hypothermia, and frostbite. The objectives of this position stand are: 1) To educate distance running event officials and participants about the most common forms of environmental illness including predisposing conditions, warning signs, susceptibility, and incidence reduction. 2) To advise race officials of their legal responsibilities and potential liability with regard to event safety and injury prevention. 3) To recommend that race officials consult local weather archives and plan events at times likely to be of low environmental stress to minimize detrimental effects on participants. 4) To encourage race officials to warn participants about environmental stress on race day and its implications for heat and cold illness. 5) To inform race officials of preventive actions that may reduce debilitation and environmental illness. 6) To describe the personnel, equipment, and supplies necessary to reduce and treat cases of collapse and environmental illness.
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PMID:American College of Sports Medicine position stand. Heat and cold illnesses during distance running. 897 Jan 49


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