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Erschienen in: Die Anaesthesiologie 12/2018

30.10.2018 | Diagnostik und Monitoring | Kasuistiken

Misleading symptoms and successful noninvasive rewarming of a patient with severe hypothermia (23.1 °C)

verfasst von: Dr. T. Woehrle, DESA, U. Lichtenauer, A. Bayer, S. Brunner, M. Angstwurm, S. T. Schäfer, H. Baschnegger

Erschienen in: Die Anaesthesiologie | Ausgabe 12/2018

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Abstract

Accidental severe hypothermia is a medical emergency in which symptoms may include coma, apnea, pulmonary edema, ventricular dysrhythmia or asystole. Despite optimal treatment, mortality remains high. This article reports a case of severe hypothermia in a geriatric hypothyroid patient, where despite a body core temperature of 23.1 °C the patient presented conscious and with stable vital signs, pronounced motor response, and a Glasgow Coma Scale score of 9. Blood gas analysis (alpha stat at 37 °C) indicated sufficient pulmonary function. A noninvasive rewarming approach proved successful and resulted in discharge without sequelae. This case highlights that symptoms considered pathognomonic for specific stages of hypothermia should be interpreted with great care in clinical practice. Hypothyroidism may have contributed to this uncommon clinical presentation. Body temperature needs to be taken into account when interpreting blood gas analyses. Even at the stage of severe hypothermia, noninvasive forced-air warming enabled rewarming without complications.
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Metadaten
Titel
Misleading symptoms and successful noninvasive rewarming of a patient with severe hypothermia (23.1 °C)
verfasst von
Dr. T. Woehrle, DESA
U. Lichtenauer
A. Bayer
S. Brunner
M. Angstwurm
S. T. Schäfer
H. Baschnegger
Publikationsdatum
30.10.2018
Verlag
Springer Medizin
Erschienen in
Die Anaesthesiologie / Ausgabe 12/2018
Print ISSN: 2731-6858
Elektronische ISSN: 2731-6866
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s00101-018-0508-4

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