4.4 Article

Surface Cooling after Cardiac Arrest: Effectiveness, Skin Safety, and Adverse Events in Routine Clinical Practice

Journal

NEUROCRITICAL CARE
Volume 14, Issue 3, Pages 382-388

Publisher

HUMANA PRESS INC
DOI: 10.1007/s12028-011-9506-y

Keywords

Therapeutic hypothermia; Hypothermia; Temperature management; Cardiac arrest; Arctic sun; Surface cooling; Adverse events; Skin injury; Shock; Body mass index

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Background Effectiveness of cooling and adverse events (AEs) involving skin have not been intensively evaluated in cardiac arrest survivors treated with therapeutic hypothermia (TH) when induced and maintained with a servomechanism-regulated surface cooling system. Methods Retrospective review of sixty-nine cardiac arrest survivor-events admitted from April 2006-September 2008 who underwent TH using the Medivance Arctic Sun Temperature Management System. A TH database and medical records were reviewed, and nursing interviews conducted. Primary endpoint was time from initiation to target temperature (TT; 32-34A degrees C). Secondary endpoints were cooling rate, percentage of hypothermia maintenance phase at TT, effect of body-mass index (BMI) on rate of cooling, and AEs. Results Mean time to the target temperature (TT) was 2.78 h; 80% of patients achieved TT within 4 h; all did within 8 h. Patients were at TT for 96.7% of hypothermia maintenance; 17% of patients had > 1 hourly temperature measurement outside TT range. Mean cooling rate during induction phase was 1.1A degrees C/h, and was not associated with BMI. Minor skin injury occurred in 14 (20%) patients; 4 (6%) were device-related. Skin injuries were associated with shock (P = 0.04), and decubitus ulcers were associated with left ventricular ejection fraction < 45% (P = 0.004). AEs included shivering (94%), hypokalemia (81%), hyperglycemia (57%), pneumonia (23%), bleeding (22%), post-cooling fever (17%), and bacteremia (9%). Conclusions The Arctic Sun Temperature Management System was an effective means of performing therapeutic hypothermia after cardiac arrest. Infrequent skin injuries were associated with vasopressor use and low ejection fraction.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.4
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available