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Automated peritoneal lavage: an extremely rapid and safe way to induce hypothermia in post-resuscitation patients

Authors :
Hagen Biermann
Stijn L. Brinckman
Albertus Beishuizen
Yolande Appelman
Ronald H. Driessen
Armand R. J. Girbes
Monique C. de Waard
Kees H. Polderman
Intensive care medicine
Cardiology
ICaR - Circulation and metabolism
Source :
Critical Care, 17(1):R31, 1-8. Springer Science + Business Media, de Waard, M C, Biermann, H, Brinckman, S L, Appelman, J E A, Driessen, R H, Polderman, K H, Girbes, A R J & Beishuizen, A 2013, ' Automated peritoneal lavage: an extremely rapid and safe way to induce hypothermia in post-resuscitation patients ', Critical Care, vol. 17, no. 1, R31, pp. 1-8 . https://doi.org/10.1186/cc12518, Critical Care
Publisher :
Springer Nature

Abstract

Mild therapeutic hypothermia (MTH) is a worldwide used therapy to improve neurological outcome in patients successfully resuscitated after cardiac arrest (CA). Preclinical data suggest that timing and speed of induction are related to reduction of secondary brain damage and improved outcome. Aiming at a rapid induction and stable maintenance phase, MTH induced via continuous peritoneal lavage (PL) using the Velomedix® Inc. automated PL system was evaluated and compared to historical controls in which hypothermia was achieved using cooled saline intravenous infusions and cooled blankets. In 16 PL patients, time to reach the core target temperature of 32.5°C was 30 minutes (interquartile range (IQR): 19 to 60), which was significantly faster compare to 150 minutes (IQR: 112 to 240) in controls. The median rate of cooling during the induction phase in the PL group of 4.1°C/h (IQR: 2.2 to 8.2) was significantly faster compared to 0.9°C/h (IQR: 0.5 to 1.3) in controls. During the 24-hour maintenance phase mean core temperature in the PL patients was 32.38 ± 0.18°C (range: 32.03 to 32.69°C) and in control patients 32.46 ± 0.48°C (range: 31.20 to 33.63°C), indicating more steady temperature control in the PL group compared to controls. Furthermore, the coefficient of variation (VC) for temperature during the maintenance phase was lower in the PL group (VC: 0.5%) compared to the control group (VC: 1.5%). In contrast to 23% of the control patients, none of the PL patients showed an overshoot of hypothermia below 31°C during the maintenance phase. Survival and neurological outcome was not different between the two groups. Neither shivering nor complications related to insertion or use of the PL method were observed. Using PL in post-CA patients results in a rapidly reached target temperature and a very precise maintenance, unprecedented in clinical studies evaluating MTH techniques. This opens the way to investigate the effects on neurological outcome and survival of ultra-rapid cooling compared to standard cooling in controlled trials in various patient groups. See related letter by Esnault et al., http://ccforum.com/content/17/3/431 ClinicalTrials.gov: NCT01016236

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
13648535 and 1466609X
Volume :
17
Issue :
1
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Critical Care
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....5ee1915e25d635ff32c4854a799e868f
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1186/cc12518