Outcome of Survivors of Accidental Deep Hypothermia and Circulatory Arrest Treated with Extracorporeal Blood Warming
Beat H. Walpoth, M.D., Beyhan N. Walpoth-Aslan, M.D., Heinrich P. Mattle, M.D., Bogdan P. Radanov, M.D., Gerhard Schroth, M.D., Leonard Schaeffler, M.D., Adam P. Fischer, M.D., Ludwig von Segesser, M.D., and Ulrich Althaus, M.D.
Background Cardiopulmonary bypass has been used to rewarm victimsof accidental deep hypothermia. Unlike other rewarming techniques,it restores organ perfusion immediately in patients with inadequatecirculation. This study evaluated the long-term outcome of survivorsof accidental deep hypothermia with circulatory arrest who hadbeen rewarmed with cardiopulmonary bypass.
Methods Deep hypothermia (core temperature, <28°C) withcirculatory arrest was found in 46 of 234 patients with accidentalhypothermia. In 32 of the 46 patients, rewarming with cardiopulmonarybypass was attempted, resulting in 15 long-term survivors. Inmost of these patients, deep hypothermia developed after mountaineeringaccidents or suicide attempts. After an average (±SD)of 6.7±4.0 years of follow-up, we obtained the patients'medical histories and performed neurologic and neuropsychologicalexaminations, neurovascular ultrasound studies, electroencephalography,and magnetic resonance imaging of the brain.
Results The average age of the patients was 25.2±9.9years; seven were female and eight were male. The mean intervalfrom discovery of the patient to rewarming with cardiopulmonarybypass was 141±50 minutes (range, 30 to 240). At follow-upthere were no hypothermia-related sequelae that impaired qualityof life. Neurologic and neuropsychological deficits observedin the early period after rewarming had fully or almost completelydisappeared. One patient had cerebellar atrophy on magneticresonance imaging with mild clinical signs, a condition thatmay have been caused by hypothermia. Other clinical abnormalitieswere either preexisting or due to injuries not related to hypothermia.
Conclusions This clinical experience demonstrates that young,otherwise healthy people can survive accidental deep hypothermiawith no or minimal cerebral impairment, even with prolongedcirculatory arrest. Cardiopulmonary bypass appears to be anefficacious rewarming technique.
Source Information
From the Departments of Thoracic and Cardiovascular Surgery (B.H.W., B.N.W.-A., U.A.), Neurology (H.P.M., L.S.), Psychiatry (B.P.R.), and Neuroradiology (G.S.), University of Bern, Inselspital, Bern; the Department of Cardiovascular Surgery, University Hospital of Lausanne, Lausanne (A.P.F., L.v.S.); and the Department of Cardiovascular Surgery, University Hospital of Zurich, Zurich (L.v.S.) all in Switzerland.
Address reprint requests to Dr. Walpoth at the Department of Thoracic and Cardiovascular Surgery, University of Bern, Inselspital, 3010 Bern, Switzerland.
Accidental Deep Hypothermia
Offenstadt G., Harries M., MacKenzie M. A., Walpoth B. H., Mattle H. P., Althaus U.
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N Engl J Med 1998;
338:1160-1162, Apr 16, 1998.
Correspondence
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