Title: Revised Cold Injuries and Cold Water Near Drowning Guidelines
1Revised Cold Injuries and Cold Water Near
Drowning Guidelines
Ken Zafren, MD, FACEP EMS Medical Director, State
of Alaska
2The State of Alaska Cold Injuries and Cold Water
Near Drowning Guidelines
- Developed in 1988 by an expert panel
- Revised in 1996
- Expert panel revision - Sitka 2002
- Revised edition in progress
3Overview of Guidelines
- General points
- Hypothermia
- Cold water near drowning
- Frostbite
- New section on avalanche rescue
4Introduction
- Guidelines - not absolute rules
- Designed as a reference, not a teaching document
5Multilevel guidelines
- General points
- General public
- First Responder / EMT-I
- EMT-II
- EMT-III / Paramedic
- Small/Bush Clinic
- Hospital
6Hypothermia -General Points
- Core temperature best measured as esophageal
temperature if possible - Epitympanic temperature second choice
- Rectal temperature third choice
7Hypothermia -General PointsWhy esophageal
temperature?
- Best reflection of core temperature
- Reflects cardiac temperature
- Relatively non-invasive
- Technology widely available
- Patient remains covered
8Hypothermia -General PointsEpitympanic
temperature
- Reflects carotid artery temperature
- Non-invasive
- Technology not yet widely available in USA
9Hypothermia -General PointsRectal temperature
- Does not reflect core temperature very well
- Lags core temperature during rewarming
- Requires disrobing patient
10Hypothermia - General PointsOrthopedic injuries
- Splint with caution in frostbitten limbs to
prevent further damage frostbitten skin is
damaged skin. - Align fractures/dislocations in neutral position.
This gives the best chance of preserving
neurovascular and other structures.
11Hypothermia - General PointsOrthopedic injuries
- Do not reduce frozen extremities to prevent
further damage. - Splints should not be constrictive in order to
allow for postinjury swelling.
12Hypothermia - General Points
- Warm oral and IV fluids to at least body
temperature to prevent further cooling. - Give IV fluids as boluses (especially for field
use).
13Hypothermia - General PointsWhy IV fluid
boluses?
- Less likely to freeze than continuous infusions
- Better titration to effect
14Hypothermia - General Points
- Chemical heat packs ineffective for warming
- Can be used on hands or feet to prevent frostbite
15Hypothermia - General Points
- Positive attitude is important
- Assume the patient can be resuscitated even if
they appear to be beyond help
16Hypothermia - General PointsContraindications to
CPR
- New temperature cutoff - core temperature
10C/50F - Rescuers exhausted or in danger or CPR cannot be
maintained throughout transport to a medical
facility - Transportation available within 3 hours
17Hypothermia - General PointsContraindications to
CPR - new cutoff
- New temperature cutoff - core temperature 10 C /
50 F - Survival has now been documented to core
temperature of 13.7 C / 56.7 F - Routine use of 10 C / 50 F in surgery
18Hypothermia - General PointsContraindications to
CPR
- Rescuers exhausted or in danger or CPR cannot be
maintained throughout transport to a medical
facility - If CPR is begun any perfusing rhythm will
probably be lost stopping CPR once begun is
therefore likely to be fatal
19Hypothermia - General PointsContraindications to
CPR
- Transportation available to critical care within
3 hours - Hypothermic patients can survive for up to 3
hours with pulse and blood pressure which are
difficult to detect.
20Hypothermia - General PointsCPR
- Apneic pulseless patient - ventilate for 3
minutes before CPR to increase VF threshold - Ventilation may increase heart rate, blood
pressure
21Hypothermia - General PointsCPR
- Apneic pulseless patient - decision to start CPR
based on time to critical care - lt3 hours ventilate (intubate, if possible),
prevent heat loss - gt3 hours chest compressions and ventilate for 30
minutes, attempt to rewarm - CPR cannot be done in a litter
22Handle hypothermic patients gently to prevent
Ventricular Fibrillation
23Hypothermia - General PointsAssessment
- Check for cardiac activity for at least 60
seconds - Automatic External Defibrillator (AED) may be
used to detect cardiac activity - signal to shock
indicates V Tach or V Fib
24Hypothermia - General PointsAssessment
- New classification for severity of hypothermia
- Follows International Commission for Alpine
Rescue, Winnepeg consensus guidelines - Correlates core temperature with observable
findings
25(No Transcript)
26Hypothermia stages
- Mild 32-35C (90-95F)
- Moderate 28-32C (82-90F)
- Severe lt28C (lt82F)
- Ideally based on esophageal temperature
- Becoming standard classification worldwide
27Hypothermia - General PublicMild Hypothermia
- Patient is cold
- Vigorous shivering
- Alert
- May be ambulatory
28Hypothermia - General PublicTreatment
- Remove wet clothes only with shelter
- Vapor barrier
- Cover head and neck
29Hypothermia - General PublicTreatment
- Shivering is an important method to increase heat
production - Sugar containing fluids are more beneficial than
hot drinks - Special importance if medical care delayed
30Hypothermia - General PublicTreatment
- Mild exercise such as walking may be helpful
after the patient is dry and has eaten
31Hypothermia - General PublicTreatment
- Mild exercise such as walking may be helpful
after the patient is dry and has eaten. If the
patient is exhausted, exercise cannot be
maintained and the patient will lose the ability
to increase body heat (primarily by shivering)
32Hypothermia - General Public Moderate-Severe
Treatment
- Handle gently
- Do not rub or manipulate extremities
33Hypothermia - General Public Moderate-Severe
(with life signs)Treatment
- Handle gently
- Do not rub or manipulate extremities
- Do not allow to sit or stand
- Do not put in shower or bath
- No exercise
34Hypothermia - General Public Moderate-Severe
(without life signs)Treatment
- Handle gently
- Check pulse for at least 60 seconds
- CPR if not contraindicated
35Hypothermia -First Responder EMT-I
- Same as general public with additions
- Oxygen, if used, should be heated and humidified
36Hypothermia -First Responder / EMT-I
- Insulate patient - sleeping bag
- Cover head and neck
- Rewarming axilla, trunk, groin
- Hot shower/bath okay only for mild hypothermia
37Hypothermia - EMT-II
- Same as EMT-I with additions
- Most patients need volume
- IV fluid should be normal saline - 250 cc
boluses, repeated as needed to treat tachycardia - Heat fluid to 104-108F (40-42C)
- Consider glucose, naloxone
38EMT-IISevere hypothermawith signs of life
- Measure core temperature (esophageal is
preferred)
39EMT-IISevere hypothermawithout signs of life
- Ventilate and pre-oxygenate 3 minutes before
intubating - Intubate
- Do not hyperventilate
- One set of defibrillations if core temperature is
less than 30C (86F) - Further attempts above 30C
40EMT-III / ParamedicSevere hypothermawithout
signs of life
- Same as for EMT-II
- No ACLS drugs
- No CPR if any rhythm on monitor other than VF/VT
41Hypothermia - HospitalGeneral Points
- Treat to level of ability
- Transfers follow usual guidelines
- May be better to bypass community hospital for
one with cardiac bypass capability
42Hypothermia - HospitalGeneral Points
- Consider transfer of patient with core temp lt20
C (68 F) - Consider bypass if BPlt60 systolic
- Stabilize patient before transport
43Hypothermia - HospitalGeneral Points
- Suggestions for evaluation and treatment
44Hypothermia - HospitalGeneral Points
- Esophageal temperature and end tidal CO2
monitoring - IV fluids must be heated.
- Heated, humidified oxygen, if available
- Avoid sedation to depress shivering
45Hypothermia - HospitalGeneral PointsRewarming
methods
- Passive external rewarming
- Active external rewarming
- Active core rewarming
46Hypothermia - HospitalGeneral PointsActive
internal rewarming
- Peritoneal lavage
- AV Rewarming
- Cardiopulmonary bypass
- Venous heat-exchange catheter (possible future
technology)
47Hypothermia - HospitalGeneral PointsActive
internal rewarming
- Slow rewarming prior to adequate ventilation
48Hypothermia - HospitalGeneral PointsCardiac
rhythm disturbances
- Supraventricular dysrhythmias are innocent
- V Tach and V Fib - one round of shocks until 30C
(85F) - Drugs ineffective
49Hypothermia - HospitalGeneral PointsInsulin
- Consider insulin during rewarming.
50Hypothermia - HospitalWhen to stop
resuscitation?
- Core temperature not improving despite aggressive
rewarming - Serum potassium gt10 with associated asphyxia
(near drowning, avalanche)
51Cold Water Near DrowningGeneral Points
- Use of PFDs with thermal protection mandatory for
emergency responders
52Cold Water Near DrowningGeneral Points
- Submersion - head under water
- Immersion - head out of water
53Cold Water Near DrowningGeneral Points
- Hypothermia not the main problem
- Cardiac, pulmonary and coagulation problems are
key - Rewarming to raise temperature to make
defibrillation more effective
54Cold Water Near Drowning - General Public
- Neck protection if possible injury
- Activate EMS system
- Start CPR if patient pulseless after pulse check
of 60 seconds - Heimlich maneuver only for solid foreign body
obstruction
55Cold Water Near Drowning - First Responder /
EMT-I
- Similar to General Public
56Cold Water Near Drowning - EMT-II
- Similar to EMT-I
- Saline lock or TKO (no fluids)
57Cold Water Near Drowning - EMT-III / Paramedic
- Similar to EMT-II
- Assess for possible cardiopulmonary bypass
58Cold Water Near Drowning - Hospital
- IV fluids only if volume depleted
- Cardiopulmonary bypass no longer recommended
59Cold Water Near Drowning - Hospital
- Active external rewarming as indicated by core
(esophageal) temperature. - Keep patients at 32-33 C to protect the brain.
60Cold Water Near Drowning - Hospital
- Agressive cerebral resuscitation (IVP monitoring,
diuretics, barbiturates) no longer recommended.
61Frostbite
- No significant changes in prehospital care
62Frostbite
- Temperature for thawing 38-40C (100-107F). The
lower end is preferred. - Stop thawing when tips of digits flush.
- Recommendations for wound care.
63Frostbite
- Fasciotomy guided by compartment pressures
(gt37-40 mm Hg) and clinical judgment - Antibiotics necessary only for deep infection
- General care recommendations
64Frostbite
- Orthopedic guidelines
- Guidelines for disposition
- Sample admitting orders
65Avalanche rescue
- Similar to cold water near drowning
- Importance of asphyxiation
66Avalanche Rescue
- Rapid extrication to 35 minutes to prevent
asphyxia - Gentle extrication after 35 minutes to prevent
ventricular fibrillation in hypothermic patient - Check for air pocket
67Avalanche Rescue
- Rapid extrication to 35 minutes to prevent
asphyxia - Patients extricated in less than 35 minutes are
unlikely to be hypothermic, but will die of
asphyxia without an adequate air pocket. - An air pocket is any space in front of the nose
or mouth, no matter how small.
68Avalanche Rescue
- Gentle extrication after 35 minutes to prevent
ventricular fibrillation in hypothermic patient - Patients extricated after 35 minutes who are
still alive will have an air pocket. - They are at risk for hypothermia.
69Avalanche Rescue
- Rapid extrication to 35 minutes to prevent
asphyxia - Gentle extrication after 35 minutes to prevent
ventricular fibrillation in hypothermic patient - Check for air pocket
70Avalanche Rescue
- CPR/ACLS for 30 minutes for burials less than 35
minutes or core temp gt32C - No CPR/ACLS for burials longer than 35 minutes or
core temp lt32C if no air pocket - CPR/ACLS for burials longer than 35 minutes or
core temp lt32C with air pocket