20 Questions Hypothermia
20 Questions Hypothermia
20 Questions Hypothermia
By Gregg A, Jones, MD
1. What temperature is considered hypothermia?
2. Is hypothermia serious?
3. How can I diagnose hypothermia in the prehospital setting?
4. The EKG can help, how?
5. What are the main EKG changes or arrhythmias in hypothermia?
6. What is this “Osborn Wave” you speak of?
7. Are the Osborn Waves always that obvious and diffuse in the EKG?
8. Other than being outside in the cold, what are some common
precipitating factors that cause people to develop hypothermia?
9. Are there different severity temperatures making hypothermia mild
versus severe?
10. Why does blood pressure decrease in hypothermic patients?
11. How do I treat these patients before I get them to the hospital…is there
a hypothermia protocol I can use as a guideline?
12. What if I respond to a call and the patient has no pulse?
13. What if that patient without a pulse is frozen solid?
14. How will the hospital re-warm my patient?
15. Does a patient need to be in cardiac arrest for the hospital to rewarm
them with ECMO?
16. Which hospitals in the West Metro do ECMO?
17. Is Frostbite a concern in hypothermic patients? If so, is there a specific
type of hospital that treats frostbite?
18. I have heard of this thing called “Core Afterdrop”, what is that?
19. Remind me again, what are some of the indications for ECMO?
20. If I am working as a medical provider in outstate Minnesota and I have
a severe hypothermic patient, should I consider sending them to an ECMO
center? If so, how should I treat them en route?
Answers:
4. The heart does not enjoy extreme temperatures. Hypothermia can lead
to cardiac arrhythmias and even cardiac arrest.
13. If you suspect your patient is frozen solid and unfortunately dead, ask
yourself these questions:
Is the patient known to have been submerged under water for greater than
90 minutes?
Does the patient have obvious signs of death such as decapitation or animal
predation?
Is the patient’s airway frozen and has ice build up?
Is the patient’s chest frozen and stiff making chest compressions
impossible?
If your patient has one of the above situations, resuscitation does not need
to be initiated. They qualify as clearly deceased. If there is any question in
your mind, start resuscitation and transportation.
14. There are many ways and techniques to rewarm hypothermic patients.
Mild HypothermiaExternal rewarming
Moderate hypothermia Active External rewarming (possible internal)
Severe HypothermiaActive internal rewarming
19. There are many uses of ECMO, and trials are ongoing as we discover
more ways to use ECMO. Here are some of the known uses:
Refractory Ventricular Fibrillation cardiac arrest (VFIB arrest)
Pulmonary embolism with shock
Massive Overdose
Amniotic fluid embolism following pregnancy
Hypothermia and Hypothermic cardiac arrest
Drowning
ARDS
20. Yes you should consider sending them to an ECMO center.
If they still have pulses:
Obtain IV access
Continuous cardiac monitoring
Have LUCAS Device close
No active external rewarming