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Query: UMLS:C0020672 (
hypothermia
)
17,327
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Problems encountered regarding the examination in forensic pathology are variable, even if the field of interest in limited to trauma alone. The most important problem appears to be the establishment of a causal relationship between the trauma and the death of the victim. From the materials I have contributed concerning examinations in forensic medicine, the problems inherent in the examination of the victim of traumatic shock may be introduced. The results from animal studies, which have been attempted to provide an experimental background to support the observations, are also discussed. My personal opinions on several trial cases in which there was a disagreement of opinion regarding the examination results will also be expressed. 1. Distinguishing death due to traumatic shock from death due to disease In the "Yacht school" incident, children with emotional disturbances and youths with a history of misconduct were treated with training which included physical punishment. Autopsy findings were compared between a 13-year old boy who was concluded to have died of traumatic shock from numerous beatings and a 21-year old youth who died of hemorrhagic pneumonia. In my opinion, a causative role of injury in the death was found in both cases. 2. Shock due to tourniquet This autopsy case concerns a 23-year-old male who entered a yoga training center, was tightly bound with a rope and died on the 8th day. Histological examination revealed thrombus formation in the small blood vessels and leukocyte agglutination within the blood vessels of the alveolar wall, suggesting
DIC
. While these findings were thought to be almost indistinguishable from those found in traumatic shock, the background conditions, including hunger, dehydration and
hypothermia
cannot be neglected in the evaluation. 3. Child abuse In one incident, a mother and her lover beat a 25-month old girl every day until her death. The original examination concluded that the cause of death was traumatic shock due to multiple trauma over the entire body caused by both adults. A second examination concluded that the cause of death was delayed suffocation due to binding of the chest and compression against a mattress. Based on an overall evaluation of the circumstances at the time of detection (including photographic evidence) as well as the contents of the statement made by the lover, I inferred that the head-down hanging of the child in the bathtub by the lover was directly related to the cause of death. In my opinion, the liability of the two adults in the crime was not the same.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
...
PMID:[Problems regarding the examination in forensic medicine]. 262 31
Injuries missed at initial operation have the potential to cause the most disastrous complications in trauma patients. Over the past 5 years, 12 patients have required re-operation for 14 injuries missed at initial laparotomy and/or thoracotomy. Six missed injuries were vascular, two each in the thorax, pelvis, and retroperitoneum. The other eight were visceral: three small bowel (one patient), two pancreatic, and one each of the heart, ureter, and diaphragm. Five patients (42%) died, three with missed vascular and two with missed visceral injuries. Three died due to complications directly related to their missed injuries, while the unrecognized injury did not play a significant role in the other two. Indications for re-operation in patients with vascular injuries were hypotension in two patients, persistent output from drains in three, and refractory acidosis in one. Re-exploration in visceral injuries was for clinical sepsis in three patients,
DIC
in one, cardiac tamponade in one, and persistent chest tube drainage in one. Eleven of the 12 patients presented to the E.D. in shock. All patients had multiple injuries with a mean of 3.25 organ systems injured. Hypotension, coagulopathy, and/or
hypothermia
(T less than 92 degrees) were felt to have contributed to missing the injury in five of the patients with vascular, and three of the patients with visceral injuries. In the four other patients, injuries were missed due to inadequate exploration or a low index of suspicion in the presence of multiple injuries.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Injuries missed at operation: nemesis of the trauma surgeon. 339 94
The peak incidence of
DIC
in the pediatric age group is in the neonatal period. The newborn infant is particularly susceptible to
DIC
because of several handicaps, such as physiological hypofunction of anticoagulant and fibrinolytic systems, an underdeveloped capacity in the reticuloendothelial system and a tendency to develop acidosis,
hypothermia
, hypoxia and shock. Although some criteria have been reported for the diagnosis of
DIC
in adults, based on clinical and laboratory findings, these are not necessarily applicable to the diagnosis of DIC in newborn infants. This is because a large blood sample is required, a long period of time is necessary for assay and difference in several coagulation and fibrinolysis factors exist between newborn infants and adults. We therefore established a criteria for the diagnosis of DIC in newborn infants, based on data obtained from newborn infants with
DIC
. Diagnostic procedures of many molecular markers of hemostasis have been developed from this. Some of them, such as FDP-D dimer are valuable for the diagnosis in children but others are not necessarily useful because of the susceptibility to the venipuncture technique. Our criteria for the diagnosis of DIC in newborn infants must be modified in the diagnosis of
DIC
in very low birth weight infants.
...
PMID:[New approach to the diagnosis of disseminated intravascular coagulation in childhood]. 843 30
Although reliable hemostasis screening in the newborn is difficult to obtain, the information gained from such testing is essential in differentiating the inherited from the acquired bleeding disorder. Sick infants are at risk for developing hemorrhage or thrombosis in response to a variety of diseases or injuries. Screening tests must be interpreted using appropriate normal ranges for term or preterm infants. Neonates are particularly susceptible to
DIC
because of their underdeveloped reticuloendothelial system and their tendency to develop acidosis,
hypothermia
, hypoxia, and shock. Bleeding is commonly the results of intravascular coagulation or decreased synthesis of clotting factors by the liver. Criteria based on clinical and laboratory findings have been determined in adults; however, these criteria are not necessarily applicable to neonates. A study reviewing 74 cases of newborns with suspected
DIC
reported that the most reliable diagnostic tests are the platelet count, D-dimer or FDP, PT, PTT, and fibrinogen. Whatever the test, the nurse's accurate assessment of the neonate, careful collection of blood, and reporting of abnormal results remain paramount in obtaining timely, appropriate care.
...
PMID:DIC screening in the newborn. 936 97
CT/MRI findings, laboratory examinations and prognoses of 42 patients with acute encephalopathy (AE) (Japan Coma Scale > or = 200) were reported. 1. Findings on CT/MRI were divided into the following 7 categories: Group 1 (normal), Group 2 (CT/MRI looked normal in acute phase, but brain atrophy developed and progressed slowly by weeks or months), Group 3 (CT/MRI looked normal within a few days after the onset of AE, but cortical laminar necrosis developed at 4-5 days after the onset), Group 4 (marked brain edema developed within 2 days after the onset of AE), Group 5 (AE with symmetric thalamic lesions), Group 6 (symmetric pallidum, lesions on MRI which appeared after brain edema disappeared), and Group 7 (the brain shrinked during acute phase, which normalized on the follow up CT/MRI). 2. Serum AST elevated in approximately 50% of the patients with AE. Sixty percent of them exhibited
DIC
, whose prognoses were poor. Cerebrospinal fluids (CSF) neopterin (NP) and/or interleukin (IL)-6 were elevated in all the 8 patients examined. In the two cases whose serum NP and IL-6 were measured at the same time, their values in the CSF were higher than those in the serum in one case, and almost the same in the other. In a patient with a condition mimicking hemorrhagic shock and encephalopathy, serum IL-6 concentration was very high (94,000 pg/ml). 3. Mild
hypothermia
(around 34 degrees C) combined with methylprednisolone pulse therapy was excellently effective on AE. A 6-year-old boy exhibited tonsillar herniation at admission recovered well to be able to run. 4. Differentiation between Reye syndrome and HSE, and the pathogenesis of AE were also discussed.
...
PMID:[Infection-related acute encephalopathy: CT scan/MRI finding, laboratory examination and prognosis]. 1072 91
The resuscitation of the massively bleeding patient may seem superficially to be successful once the patient's vital signs have stabilized. The restoration of stable vital signs, however, does not confirm two critical elements of a thorough physiologic resuscitation: that there is truly adequate delivery of oxygen to all tissue beds and that physiologic disturbances that may have occurred because of massive transfusion during the resuscitation process have resolved. With respect to the adequacy of oxygen delivery, the current clinical endpoints, including mixed venous oxygen saturation, cardiac output, and serum lactate, reflect global perfusion and not regional oxygenation. Of these global measures, serum lactate is currently the best indicator as to whether some circulatory beds remain inadequately perfused. Serum lactate should be followed, and, in the event that elevated levels persist, measures to augment oxygen delivery (e.g., increasing cardiac output, hemoglobin concentration, oxygen saturation) should be undertaken. Gastric tonometry provides a method for specific examination of the splanchnic circulation. The current measurement techniques, however, require steady-state conditions and make it impractical in many physiologically dynamic situations. The physiologic disturbances associated with massive resuscitation (e.g., hyperkalemia, hypocalcemia, hypomagnesemia,
hypothermia
) should be anticipated. Coagulation disturbances occur, especially when massive transfusion is accompanied by hypotension,
hypothermia
, or acidosis. Coagulation parameters should be measured with the loss of each one half of blood volume or after each 30-minute interval, whichever occurs first. Evaluation at blood volume intervals is relevant to the development of a strictly dilutional coagulopathy. The development of
DIC
, occurring because of tissue factor exposure or acidosis, however, is related more to the time lapsed than to the absolute volume lost or replaced.
...
PMID:The massively bleeding patient. 1177 75
The dramatic advances that have taken place in recent years in the care of sick and premature infants also have been matched by a similar increase in the use of blood transfusion therapy. Haematological features indicate that a newborn has a blood volume of 85-125 ml/kg the foetal haemoglobin is 60-85% and average Hb in full term infant is 18 gm/dl. By 2-3 months it falls to 11-12 g/dl the main cause of anemia are iron poor diet, weaning diets recurrent or chronic infections and hemolytic episodes in malarious areas. The red cells transfusions are usually top up transfusions, exchange transfusions, partial exchange transfusions. Top up- are for investigational losses and correction of mild degrees of anemias, upto to 5-15 ml/kg. They comprise 90% of all neonatal transfusions and are used in low birth babies in special care units for a maximum of 9-10 episodes. The walk in donor programs once popular are not much in vogue. The threshold for transfusion is 8-10 g/dl Hb for upto 5 weeks. Exchange transfusions are done for correction of anemia, removal of bilirubin, removal of antibodies and replacement of red cells. Ideally plasma reduced red cells that are not older than 5 days are used. It is prepared by removal of 120 ml of standard whole blood donation. The advantage of fresh cells is that hyperkalemia is avoided and good post transfusion survival acceptable red cell oxygen affinity. However it has to be screened for sickle cell disease and G6PD deficiency. Indications for exchange transfusion are kernicterus, neonatal hemolysis, G6PD deficiency, ARDS, neonatal sepsis,
DIC
and neonatal isoimmune thrombocytopaenia. Complications include over transfusion, perforation of major vessels, hypocalcaemia, citrate toxicity,
hypothermia
, hypoglycaemia, thrombocytopenia, necrotizing enterocolitis, GVHD, bacterial, viral infections. Partial exchange transfusions are done for symptomatic anemia, where Hb<10 g/dl, it is indicated in polycythemia and hyperviscosity syndromes. Exchange volume = Blood volume x (observed Hct-Desired HCt) divided observed Hct. Points to consider-there is weak expression of ABO antigens so particular care while grouping. Transfusing volumes should be 2-5 ml/kg/hour in paediatric bags of 50-100 ml with infusion devices. Platelet transfusion are indicated in neonatal throbocytopaenia, thrombocytopaenia due to sepsis,
DIC
, bacterial pathogens, CMV, TORCHS, Obstetric conditions such as pre eclampsia, intrauterine death abruption placenta birth injury hypoxia schock neonatal iso immune thrombocytopaenia and maternal ITP. Administration 1 RDE/pack per 2.5 kg single dose of fresh platelets less than 24hrs which contains 55 x 10(9) cells. This also contributes fresh plasma so is useful for coagulation defects also, though there is a risk of CMV and GVHD due to leucocyte contamination. Granulocyte concentrate; Gravity leucopheresis-1:8 ratio of 60 ml of 6% HES made to stand for 1hr.
...
PMID:Component therapy. 1451 88
The patient in this study was a 43-year-old woman who had become unconscious after contracting influenza virus type A infection. Brain CT showed severe brain swelling. Brain MRI also showed brain edema with no specific abnormality on T2-weighted images. We diagnosed her as having influenza type A virus-associated encephalopahty and treated her with Oseltamivir, methylprednisolone pulse therapy, and a high dose of intravenous immunoglobulins. In addition, we treated her with
hypothermia
and a high dose of intravenous ATIII because of the severe brain swelling and possibility of
DIC
. After the treatments, brain swelling had improved, and she regained consciousness without any sequelae. Adult influenza virus-associated encephalopathy is rare. We were able to successfully treat our patient with primary multidisciplinary treatments without causing sequelae.
...
PMID:[Case of adult influenza type A virus-associated encephalopathy successfully treated with primary multidisciplinary treatments]. 1809 96
The primary resuscitation of severely injured patients, acute haemorrhage and shock-trauma has been well reported in the literature. Resuscitation protocols include the use of diverse agents such as fresh whole blood [FWB], packed red blood cells [PRBCs], reconstituted blood products, fresh frozen plasma [FFP] and its derivative concentrates or recombinant products, volume expanders and tranexamic acid [TXA]. The reasonably prudent use of these agents and products is necessary to reverse risk factors of haemorrhagic shock such as haemodilution,
hypothermia
, acidosis and coagulopathy. Addressing the mechanisms of haemoregulation in the pathophysiology of
DIC
is important to optimise transfusion practice.
...
PMID:Advances in transfusion science for shock-trauma: Optimising the clinical management of acute haemorrhage. 2665 28