keyword
https://read.qxmd.com/read/36796930/corticospinal-and-spinal-excitability-during-peripheral-or-central-cooling-in-humans
#1
JOURNAL ARTICLE
M Talebian Nia, C Leclerc, C Glazebrook, J Chopek, G G Giesbrecht
Cold exposure can impair fine and gross motor control and threaten survival. Most motor task decrement is due to peripheral neuromuscular factors. Less is known about cooling on central neural factors. Corticospinal and spinal excitability were determined during cooling of the skin (Tsk ) and core (Tco ). Eight subjects (four female) were actively cooled in a liquid perfused suit for 90 min (2 °C inflow temperature), passively cooled for 7 min, and then rewarmed for 30 min (41 °C inflow temperature)...
February 2023: Journal of Thermal Biology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/33518494/witnessed-cardiac-arrest-in-a-hypothermic-avalanche-victim-completely-buried-for-2-hours
#2
Nicholas Daniel, Nicholas Weinberg, Frank Carus, Benjamin Church, Ken Zafren
A 34-y-old skier triggered a wind slab avalanche and was completely buried for over 2 h. After extrication by rescuers, the victim was breathing and conscious. Despite directions from the rescuers against standing up, the victim struggled to free himself and ultimately stood upright before collapsing in cardiac arrest. The rescuers performed cardiopulmonary resuscitation during transport to a nearby trailhead, where a helicopter emergency medical services crew found that the victim was in ventricular fibrillation...
January 28, 2021: Wilderness & Environmental Medicine
https://read.qxmd.com/read/32778153/is-prehospital-use-of-active-external-warming-dangerous-for-patients-with-accidental-hypothermia-a-systematic-review
#3
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Sigurd Mydske, Øyvind Thomassen
BACKGROUND: Optimal prehospital management and treatment of patients with accidental hypothermia is a matter of frequent debate, with controversies usually revolving around the subject of rewarming. The rule of thumb in primary emergency care and first aid for patients with accidental hypothermia has traditionally been to be refrain from prehospital active rewarming and to focus on preventing further heat loss. The potential danger of active external rewarming in a prehospital setting has previously been generally accepted among the emergency medicine community based on a fear of potential complications, such as "afterdrop", "rewarming syndrome", and "circum-rescue collapse"...
August 10, 2020: Scandinavian Journal of Trauma, Resuscitation and Emergency Medicine
https://read.qxmd.com/read/31295348/comparison-of-electric-resistive-heating-pads-and-forced-air-warming-for-pre-hospital-warming-of-non-shivering-hypothermic-subjects
#4
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Daryl M G Hurrie, Emily Hildebrand, Scott M Arnould, Jeremy Plett, Daniel Bellan, Al Buchel, Gordon G Giesbrecht
INTRODUCTION: Victims of severe hypothermia require external rewarming, as self-rewarming through shivering heat production is either minimal or absent. The US Military commonly uses forced-air warming in field hospitals, but these systems require significant power (600-800 W) and are not portable. This study compared the rewarming effectiveness of an electric resistive heating pad system (requiring 80 W) to forced-air rewarming on cold subjects in whom shivering was pharmacologically inhibited...
July 11, 2019: Military Medicine
https://read.qxmd.com/read/30824366/successful-field-rewarming-of-a-patient-with-apparent-moderate-hypothermia-using-a-hypothermia-wrap-and-a-chemical-heat-blanket
#5
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Dan Phillips, Jason Bowman, Ken Zafren
Hypothermia is a common problem encountered by search and rescue teams. Although mildly hypothermic patients can be rewarmed in the field and can then self-evacuate, the Wilderness Medical Society hypothermia guidelines suggest that a moderately hypothermic patient in the wilderness requires warming in a medical facility. The hypothermia prevention and management kit, developed by the US military, consists of a chemical heat blanket (CHB) and a heat-reflective shell. We present a case in which a hypothermia wrap and the CHB from a hypothermia prevention and management kit were used successfully to rewarm a patient with apparent moderate hypothermia in the field...
June 2019: Wilderness & Environmental Medicine
https://read.qxmd.com/read/30737153/efficacy-of-head-and-torso-rewarming-using-a-human-model-for-severe-hypothermia
#6
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Kartik Kulkarni, Erik Hildahl, Ramesh Dutta, Sandra C Webber, Steven Passmore, Gerren K McDonald, Gordon G Giesbrecht
INTRODUCTION: To evaluate the rewarming effectiveness of a similar amount of heat (from a charcoal heater) applied to either the head or torso in a human model for severe hypothermia in which shivering is pharmacologically inhibited in mildly hypothermic subjects. METHODS: Six male subjects were cooled on 3 different occasions, each in 8°C water for 60 min, or to a lowest core temperature of 35°C. Shivering was inhibited by intravenous meperidine (1.5 mg·kg-1 ), administered during the last 10 min of the cold-water immersion...
February 5, 2019: Wilderness & Environmental Medicine
https://read.qxmd.com/read/30683520/management-of-accidental-hypothermia-a-narrative-review
#7
REVIEW
M L Avellanas Chavala, M Ayala Gallardo, Í Soteras Martínez, E Subirats Bayego
A narrative review is presented on the diagnosis, treatment and management of accidental hypothermia. Although all these processes form a continuum, for descriptive purposes in this manuscript the recommendations are organized into the prehospital and in-hospital settings. At prehospital level, it is advised to: a) perform high-quality cardiopulmonary resuscitation for cardiac arrest patients, regardless of body temperature; b) establish measures to minimize further cooling; c) initiate rewarming; d) prevent rescue collapse and continued cooling (afterdrop); and (e) select the appropriate hospital based on the clinical and hemodynamic situation of the patient...
December 2019: Medicina intensiva
https://read.qxmd.com/read/28506514/a-novel-cooling-method-and-comparison-of-active-rewarming-of-mildly-hypothermic-subjects
#8
COMPARATIVE STUDY
Mark L Christensen, Grant S Lipman, Dennis A Grahn, Kate M Shea, Joseph Einhorn, H Craig Heller
OBJECTIVE: To compare the effectiveness of arteriovenous anastomosis (AVA) vs heated intravenous fluid (IVF) rewarming in hypothermic subjects. Additionally, we sought to develop a novel method of hypothermia induction. METHODS: Eight subjects underwent 3 cooling trials each to a core temperature of 34.8±0.6 (32.7 to 36.3°C [mean±SD with range]) by 14°C water immersion for 30 minutes, followed by walking on a treadmill for 5 minutes. Core temperatures (Δtes) and rates of cooling (°C/h) were measured...
June 2017: Wilderness & Environmental Medicine
https://read.qxmd.com/read/28411927/out-of-hospital-evaluation-and-treatment-of-accidental-hypothermia
#9
REVIEW
Ken Zafren
Accidental hypothermia is an unintentional drop in core temperature to 35°C or below. Core temperature is best measured by esophageal probe. If core temperature cannot be measured, the degree should be estimated using clinical signs. Treatment is to protect from further heat loss, minimize afterdrop, and prevent cardiovascular collapse during rescue and resuscitation. The patient should be handled gently, kept horizontal, insulated, and actively rewarmed. Active rewarming is also beneficial in mild hypothermia but passive rewarming usually suffices...
May 2017: Emergency Medicine Clinics of North America
https://read.qxmd.com/read/27816378/dull-brains-and-frozen-feet-a-historical-essay-on-cold
#10
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Harvey V Lankford
This essay will review historical and medical aspects of cold exposure, hypothermia, and frostbite during the Napoleonic era. The 19th century writings of Dominique Jean Larrey, Pierre Jean Moricheau-Beaupré, and others are used to provide an evocative supporting narrative to illustrate some of the cold illnesses, physiology, and theory of both an earlier era and the present time. Medical care for over a century followed the how but not the why of treating frostbite and hypothermia slowly with snow or cold water rather than heat...
December 2016: Wilderness & Environmental Medicine
https://read.qxmd.com/read/27736258/the-ice-mile-case-study-of-2-swimmers-selected-physiological-responses-and-performance
#11
JOURNAL ARTICLE
John Kenny, SarahJane Cullen, Giles D Warrington
PURPOSE: "Ice-mile" swimming presents significant physiological challenges and potential safety issues, but few data are available. This study examined deep body temperature (BT), respiratory rate (RR), and swim performance in 2 swimmers completing an ice-mile swim of 1 mile (1600 m) in water less than 5°C. METHODS: Two male cold-water-habituated swimmers completed a 1-mile lake swim in 3.9°C water. For comparative purposes, they completed an indoor 1-mile swim in 28...
May 2017: International Journal of Sports Physiology and Performance
https://read.qxmd.com/read/26289615/dangers-of-prehospital-cooling-a-case-report-of-afterdrop-in-a-patient-with-exertional-heat-stroke
#12
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Todd E Stewart, Allen C Whitford
BACKGROUND: Exertional heat stroke is a potentially life-threatening disease with varying clinical presentations and severity. Given the severe morbidity that can accompany the disease, the immediate management often begins in the prehospital setting. It is important to have not only a comprehensive understanding of the prehospital cooling methods in addition to hospital management strategies, but an understanding of their potential complications as well. CASE REPORT: A 32-year-old male presented to a San Antonio hospital in March 2014 with progressive confusion, nausea, nonbloody emesis, and ataxia...
November 2015: Journal of Emergency Medicine
https://read.qxmd.com/read/26217979/apparent-cooling-rate-of-7%C3%A2-c-per-hour-in-an-avalanche-victim
#13
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Mathias Ströhle, Gabriel Putzer, Emily Procter, Peter Paal
Avalanche victims can become hypothermic within 35 minutes of snow burial. However, reported cooling rates for avalanche victims are highly variable and it is poorly understood how much cooling is influenced by general factors (body composition, clothing, ambient conditions, duration of burial, and metabolism), unknown inter-individual factors or other phenomena (e.g., afterdrop). We report an apparent cooling rate of ∼7°C in ∼60 minutes in a healthy backcountry skier who was rewarmed with forced air and warm fluids and was discharged after 2 weeks without neurological sequelae...
December 2015: High Altitude Medicine & Biology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/26090706/cold-water-immersion-for-hyperthermic-humans-wearing-american-football-uniforms
#14
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Kevin C Miller, Erik E Swartz, Blaine C Long
CONTEXT: Current treatment recommendations for American football players with exertional heatstroke are to remove clothing and equipment and immerse the body in cold water. It is unknown if wearing a full American football uniform during cold-water immersion (CWI) impairs rectal temperature (Trec) cooling or exacerbates hypothermic afterdrop. OBJECTIVE: To determine the time to cool Trec from 39.5°C to 38.0°C while participants wore a full American football uniform or control uniform during CWI and to determine the uniform's effect on Trec recovery postimmersion...
August 2015: Journal of Athletic Training
https://read.qxmd.com/read/25943674/effectiveness-of-cold-water-immersion-for-treating-exertional-heat-stress-when-immediate-response-is-not-possible
#15
JOURNAL ARTICLE
A D Flouris, B J Friesen, M J Carlson, D J Casa, G P Kenny
Immediate treatment with cold water immersion (CWI) is the gold standard for exertional heatstroke. In the field, however, treatment is often delayed due to delayed paramedic response and/or inaccurate diagnosis. We examined the effect of treatment (reduction of rectal temperature to 37.5 °C) delays of 5, 20, and 40 min on core cooling rates in eight exertionally heat-stressed (40.0 °C rectal temperature) individuals. We found that rectal temperature was elevated above baseline (P < 0.05) at the end of all delay periods (5 min: 40...
June 2015: Scandinavian Journal of Medicine & Science in Sports
https://read.qxmd.com/read/24024303/cognitive-function-during-lower-body-water-immersion-and-post-immersion-afterdrop
#16
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Yongsuk Seo, Chul-Ho Kim, Edward J Ryan, John Gunstad, Ellen L Glickman, Matthew D Muller
INTRODUCTION: The physiological effects of immersion hypothermia and afterdrop are well-characterized, but the psychological effects are less clear. The purpose of this study was to quantify changes in cognitive function during and after lower body water immersion. METHODS: On separate mornings, nine young healthy men participated in both neutral (35 +/- 1 degree C) and cold (13 +/- 1 degree C) water immersion. Subjects rested in neutral air for 30 min followed by 60 min water immersion to the iliac crest and 15 min of recovery in neutral air...
September 2013: Aviation, Space, and Environmental Medicine
https://read.qxmd.com/read/22763083/fifty-three-hours-of-total-sleep-deprivation-has-no-effect-on-rewarming-from-cold-air-exposure
#17
RANDOMIZED CONTROLLED TRIAL
Tiffany A Esmat, Katherine E Clark, Matthew D Muller, Judith A Juvancic-Heltzel, Ellen L Glickman
OBJECTIVE: Sleep deprivation and cold air exposure are both experienced in occupational and military settings but the combined effects of these 2 stressors is unknown. The purpose of this study was to determine the effects of 53 hours of total sleep deprivation on thermoregulation during the rewarming phase (25°C air) after acute cold air exposure (10°C air). METHODS: Eight young men underwent 2 trials in which they either received 7 hours of sleep at night or were totally sleep deprived...
December 2012: Wilderness & Environmental Medicine
https://read.qxmd.com/read/20832700/spontaneous-endogenous-core-temperature-rewarming-after-cooling-due-to-snow-burial
#18
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Colin K Grissom, Chris H Harmston, John C McAlpine, Martin I Radwin, Brad Ellington, Ellie L Hirshberg, Andre Crouch
OBJECTIVE: To measure afterdrop and rewarming in subjects placed in a hypothermia wrap immediately after extrication from 60 minutes of snow burial. METHODS: We measured esophageal core body temperature (Tes) in 6 subjects buried in compacted snow (mean density 39%) for up to 60 minutes at an altitude of 2450 m while breathing with an AvaLung (Black Diamond Equipment, Salt Lake City, UT). Mean snow temperature was -3.5 ± 1.0 °C and mean air temperature was 0 ± 2 °C...
September 2010: Wilderness & Environmental Medicine
https://read.qxmd.com/read/19499476/field-torso-warming-modalities-a-comparative-study-using-a-human-model
#19
COMPARATIVE STUDY
J Peter Lundgren, Otto Henriksson, Thea Pretorius, Farrell Cahill, Gerald Bristow, Alecs Chochinov, Alexander Pretorius, Ulf Bjornstig, Gordon G Giesbrecht
OBJECTIVE: To compare four field-appropriate torso-warming modalities that do not require alternating-current (AC) electrical power, using a human model of nonshivering hypothermia. METHODS: Five subjects, serving as their own controls, were cooled four times in 8 degrees C water for 10-30 minutes. Shivering was inhibited by buspirone (30 mg) taken orally prior to cooling and intravenous (IV) meperidine (1.25 mg/kg) at the end of immersion. Subjects were hoisted out of the water, dried, and insulated and then underwent 120 minutes of one of the following: spontaneous warming only; a charcoal heater on the chest; two flexible hot-water bags (total 4 liters of water at 55 degrees C, replenished every 20 minutes) applied to the chest and upper back; or two chemical heating pads applied to the chest and upper back...
July 2009: Prehospital Emergency Care
https://read.qxmd.com/read/18990682/understanding-post-operative-temperature-drop-in-cardiac-surgery-a-mathematical-model
#20
JOURNAL ARTICLE
M J Tindall, M A Peletier, N M W Severens, D J Veldman, B A J M de Mol
A mathematical model is presented to understand heat transfer processes during the cooling and re-warming of patients during cardiac surgery. Our compartmental model is able to account for many of the qualitative features observed in the cooling of various regions of the body including the central core containing the majority of organs, the rectal region containing the intestines and the outer peripheral region of skin and muscle. In particular, we focus on the issue of afterdrop: a drop in core temperature following patient re-warming, which can lead to serious post-operative complications...
December 2008: Mathematical Medicine and Biology: a Journal of the IMA
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