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Hyperthermia and ST Elevation

Dr. Smith's ECG Blog

Our patient had a Brugada Type 1 pattern elicited by an elevated core temperature, which is also a documented phenomenon. Alexandra Schick ( with edits by Dr. Smith ) of an elderly woman who was seen in the ED for altered mental status, hyperthermia, and the initial ECG shown above.

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Grand Rounds Recap 11.15.23

Taming the SRU

EMS had reported she had coded en route. She presented with a core temp of 30C and her CT scan did not show a devastating head injury as was expected. She regained pulses with warming on arrival. Her labs and imaging that did not show signs of significant hypoxia/ischemia. It is possible she was just severely hypothermic.

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SGEM#391: Is it Time for a Cool Change (Hypothermia After In-Hospital Cardiac Arrest)?

The Skeptics' Guide to EM

You are tidying your things […] The post SGEM#391: Is it Time for a Cool Change (Hypothermia After In-Hospital Cardiac Arrest)? You are tidying your things in anticipation of the arrival of the dayshift when a code blue is called. Are we supposed to be starting hypothermia?” Date: February 1, 2023 Reference: Wolfrum et al.

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SGEM#275: 10th Avenue Freeze Out – Therapeutic Hypothermia after Non-Shockable Cardiac Arrest

The Skeptics' Guide to EM

Case: A 59-year-old […] The post SGEM#275: 10th Avenue Freeze Out – Therapeutic Hypothermia after Non-Shockable Cardiac Arrest first appeared on The Skeptics Guide to Emergency Medicine. Do you continue with the ICE Code? Background: We have covered therapeutic hypothermia many times on the SGEM. What do you say?

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Issue #4: The Latest in Critical Care, 6/12/23

PulmCCM

Induced hypothermia after cardiac arrest is also called “active temperature control” or “targeted temperature management.” Use code PULMCCM15 and get 15% off when you register online.

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The Latest in Critical Care, 1/29/24 (Issue #27)

PulmCCM

Read the document for all the details (it’s not long). Patients presenting with hypothermia should not be warmed too quickly (allowing their temperature to increase by <0.5°C/hour). PulmCCM is not affiliated with the American Heart Association. Here’s PulmCCM’s take on the new changes. °C was advised).

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Chemical Burns

Mind The Bleep

Exposure Expose the patient in a systematic manner while keeping remaining body areas covered e.g. 1 limb at a time, to reduce the risk of hypothermia. Provide detailed documentation of the initial assessment, treatment provided, and the patient’s response to interventions. Assess pupillary reaction to light.

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