Inviting an author to review:
Find an author and click ‘Invite to review selected article’ near their name.
Search for authorsSearch for similar articles
31
views
0
recommends
+1 Recommend
1 collections
    0
    shares
      • Record: found
      • Abstract: found
      • Article: found
      Is Open Access

      Estudo da hipotermia acidental em idosos institucionalizados Translated title: Study on accidental hypothermia in institutionalized elderly

      research-article

      Read this article at

      Bookmark
          There is no author summary for this article yet. Authors can add summaries to their articles on ScienceOpen to make them more accessible to a non-specialist audience.

          Abstract

          OBJETIVO: Analisar a prevalência, causas e evolução da hipotermia acidental em idosos institucionalizados. MÉTODOS: Estudo prospectivo realizado entre janeiro e dezembro de 2004, no Hospital Geriátrico e de Convalescentes D. Pedro II, com 483 internos. Hipotermia foi confirmada por termômetro esofágico, utilizado em todos os pacientes com temperatura axilar menor ou igual a 35ºC (95ºF). Tanto o diagnóstico etiológico quanto as complicações da hipotermia foram observados em exames clínico e subsidiários de urgência como eletrocardiograma, radiografia de tórax, hemograma, gasometria arterial, glicemia, metabólitos, amilase, função hepática e renal, sorologias para HIV, sífilis e hepatite B e urina tipo I. Foram adotadas medidas de reaquecimento entre outras do protocolo de tratamento. RESULTADOS: A prevalência de hipotermia foi de 7,2% especialmente em mulheres (65,7%), e a média de idade do grupo foi 76,4 anos. A maioria dos pacientes (77,1%) apresentava elevado grau de dependência (Katz "F" e "G"). Hipotermia leve foi identificada na maioria dos idosos (71,4%). A taxa de mortalidade foi de 62,8%, sendo 31,4% em vigência de hipotermia e 31,4% após sua reversão. Em 100,0% dos casos, a etiologia foi infecciosa: pneumonia em 80%, infecção urinária em 60,0%, e úlceras por pressão em 17,1%. Em 60% dos casos havia mais de um foco infeccioso. CONCLUSÃO: A hipotermia em idosos institucionalizados é uma grave condição clínica, com altos índices de mortalidade. A prevenção, o diagnóstico precoce e medidas de reaquecimento central corroboram para um melhor prognóstico.

          Translated abstract

          OBJECTIVE: To analyze the prevalence, causes and outcome of hypothermia in institutionalized elderly. METHODS: prospective study held from January to December, 2004 at the Hospital Geriátrico e de Convalescentes Dom Pedro II (Geriatric and Convalescent Hospital Dom Pedro II), with 483 long-term care beds. Hypothermia was diagnosed by esophageal thermometer in all patients with axillary temperature below or equal to 35°C or 95ºF. Clinical examination and tests were used to obtain etiologic diagnosis and detect complications. Tests included: ECG, Chest X-Ray, blood count, blood gas analysis, glycemia, biochemical blood tests, amylase, kidney and liver functions, urinalysis and serology for HIV, syphilis and hepatitis B. Rewarming was adopted, among other actions in the treatment protocol. RESULTS: Thirty nine cases of hypothermia were confirmed, 31 in elderly (60 years old or over), 10 men and 21 women with an average age of 76.9 years. Eighty three percent of these patients had a high degree of dependence (Katz index between "F" and "G"). Seventy percent of these cases had mild hypothermia (32º-35°C [89.6º-95ºF]), 25.0% had moderate hypothermia (28°-31,9°C [82.4º-89.6ºF]) and 5.0% had severe hypothermia (<28°C [<82.4ºF]). Seventy three percent of these patients died (50.0% during hypothermia and 50.0% after reversal). Infections were the etiology in all cases (Pneumonia [80.0%], urinary tract infection [60.0%] and pressure ulcer [17.1%]). CONCLUSION: Hypothermia in institutionalized elderly is a serious clinical diagnosis with a high level of mortality. Prevention, early diagnosis and measures of central rewarming have collaborated for a better prognosis.

          Related collections

          Most cited references40

          • Record: found
          • Abstract: found
          • Article: not found

          Pathophysiology of accidental hypothermia.

          L Mallet (2002)
          Accidental hypothermia is an uncommon problem that affects people of all ages, but particularly the elderly. This review briefly outlines the aetiological factors that may predispose to hypothermia, with particular reference to the effects of sepsis, although the specific situation of cold-water immersion is not addressed. A more detailed analysis of the pathophysiology of hypothermia then examines the cardiovascular, haematological, neurological, respiratory, renal, metabolic, and gastrointestinal systems. Clinically relevant findings are highlighted and some associated management points are related to the physiological changes. Most of these changes are reversible on rewarming, and are resistant to pharmacological manipulation; some of the pathological effects are related more to the process of rewarming than to the hypothermia itself.
            Bookmark
            • Record: found
            • Abstract: found
            • Article: not found

            Cold stress, near drowning and accidental hypothermia: a review.

            This paper reviews literature on the topic of cold stress, near-drowning and hypothermia, written mainly since the last review of this type in this journal. The main effects of cold stress, especially in cold water immersion, include the "cold shock" response, local cooling causing decrements in physical and mental performance, and ultimately core cooling as hypothermia occurs. The section on cold-water submersion (near-drowning) includes discussion regarding the various mechanisms for brain and body cooling during submersion. The mechanisms for cold-induced protection of the anoxic brain are discussed with attention given to decreased brain temperature and the Q10 principle, the mammalian dive reflex and a newly considered mechanism; cold-induced changes in neurotransmitter release (i.e., glutamate and dopamine). The section on the post-cooling period includes the post-rescue collapse and subsequent rewarming strategies used in the field, during emergency transport or in medical facilities. Recent research on topics such as inhalation warming, body-to-body warming, radio wave therapy, warm water immersion, exercise, body cavity lavage, and cardiopulmonary bypass is reviewed. Information on new methods of warming, including arteriovenous anastomoses (AVA) warming (by application of heat- with or without negative pressure application-to distal extremities in an effort to increase AVA blood flow), forced-air warming, and peripheral vascular extracorporeal warming, are discussed.
              Bookmark
              • Record: found
              • Abstract: found
              • Article: not found

              Spontaneous periodic hypothermia.

              Spontaneous periodic hypothermia is a rare syndrome of recurrent, centrally mediated hypothermia without an identifiable systemic cause or brain lesion. Most patients defend a temporarily lowered temperature "set point" during episodes of hypothermia, despite manifesting many well-known systemic consequences of core temperature hypothermia. No case of death directly attributable to an episode of spontaneous periodic hypothermia has been reported, although many of the serious systemic effects of hypothermia have been documented in these cases, so it is not unlikely that death may occur. The syndrome's cause, and that of Shapiro syndrome, remains unknown. Pharmacologic trials to date have been only modestly successful. Anticonvulsant agents, clonidine, and cyproheptadine appear the most likely to succeed, with cyproheptadine being a reasonable first choice. Given that the term "spontaneous periodic hypothermia" describes a syndrome, and not a pathophysiologic mechanism, it is likely to encompass a common eventuality, arrived at via several different pathways. One can postulate mechanisms such as structural abnormalities, trauma, infection, irritation, and degeneration involving strategic locations which create a focus for epileptic or other periodic dysfunction whose scope involves the centers for thermoregulation. The existence of 2 distinct, oppositional thermoregulatory centers would allow for speculation of similar mechanisms accounting for cases of both periodic hypo- and hyperthermia (61). Postmortem data regarding the hypothalamic and surrounding areas from future cases of Shapiro syndrome and spontaneous periodic hypothermia would be of great interest. Further, more sensitive in vivo testing methods are clearly needed. The role of PET or single photon emission computed tomography (SPECT) with technetium 99m-labeled hexamethylpropylene amine oxime (Tc 99m HMPAO) performed acutely during an episode remains to be characterized (64, 103, 105). The term "diencephalic epilepsy" may in fact be accurate, given the periodic episodes of the case presented here and similar cases resulting from non-generalized seizure activity, with or without an underlying predisposing lesion. The label diencephalic epilepsy has been merely speculative so far, however, as definitive evidence of seizure activity has not been documented. Further, it is expected that the descriptive terms "spontaneous periodic hypothermia" and "episodic spontaneous hypothermia with hyperhidrosis" will outlive their usefulness as researchers gain greater understanding of this syndrome, and be replaced with a more pathophysiologically meaningful nomenclature.
                Bookmark

                Author and article information

                Contributors
                Role: ND
                Role: ND
                Role: ND
                Journal
                ramb
                Revista da Associação Médica Brasileira
                Rev. Assoc. Med. Bras.
                Associação Médica Brasileira (São Paulo )
                1806-9282
                2009
                : 55
                : 6
                : 663-671
                Affiliations
                [1 ] Hospital Israelita Albert Einstein
                [2 ] Santa Casa de Misericórdia de São Paulo Brazil
                Article
                S0104-42302009000600010
                10.1590/S0104-42302009000600010
                19c8cd00-7b40-452b-b179-212dc5cdacf5

                http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/

                History
                Product

                SciELO Brazil

                Self URI (journal page): http://www.scielo.br/scielo.php?script=sci_serial&pid=0104-4230&lng=en
                Categories
                MEDICINE, GENERAL & INTERNAL

                Internal medicine
                Hypothermia,Aged,Institutionalization,Hipotermia,Idoso,Institucionalização
                Internal medicine
                Hypothermia, Aged, Institutionalization, Hipotermia, Idoso, Institucionalização

                Comments

                Comment on this article

                scite_
                0
                0
                0
                0
                Smart Citations
                0
                0
                0
                0
                Citing PublicationsSupportingMentioningContrasting
                View Citations

                See how this article has been cited at scite.ai

                scite shows how a scientific paper has been cited by providing the context of the citation, a classification describing whether it supports, mentions, or contrasts the cited claim, and a label indicating in which section the citation was made.

                Similar content1,076

                Cited by1

                Most referenced authors157