• Ther Hypothermia Temp Manag · Mar 2021

    Feasibility and Performance of a Gel-Adhesive Pad System for Pediatric Targeted Temperature Management: An Exploratory Analysis of 19 Pediatric Critically Ill Patients.

    • Alicia M Alcamo, Rebecca Lavezoli, Cameron Dezfulian, Dennis W Simon, Rajesh K Aneja, ClarkRobert S BRSBDepartment of Critical Care Medicine and UPMC Children's Hospital of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, USA.Department of Pediatrics, UPMC Children's Hospital of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, USA.Safar Center for Resuscitation, Patrick M Kochanek, and Ericka L Fink.
    • Department of Anesthesiology and Critical Care Medicine, Children's Hospital of Philadelphia, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA.
    • Ther Hypothermia Temp Manag. 2021 Mar 1; 11 (1): 19-27.

    AbstractTargeted temperature management (TTM) is an important treatment modality in pediatric neurocritical care. There are different types of devices available to deliver this therapy, but limited pediatric data exist. This quality improvement study evaluates the use of a surface cooling device that uses gel-adhesive pads for TTM in critically ill pediatric patients. An institutional TTM protocol to use the gel-adhesive pad system was developed with three different temperature goals: normothermia (goal temperature 37°C), mild hypothermia (goal temperature 35°C with rewarming duration of 12 hours to normothermia), and moderate hypothermia (goal temperature 33°C with rewarming duration of 24 hours to normothermia). Protocol and device implementation required several different educational sessions for all members of the critical care team. An exploratory analysis was performed for 19 patients with complete clinical and device temperature data. The most common protocol used was normothermia (73.6%). By protocol, time to goal temperature was 58 minutes (22.0-112.8) for normothermia, 46.5 minutes (44.3-48.8) for mild hypothermia, and 93 minutes (46.5-406.5) for moderate hypothermia. Patients remained within ±0.5°C temperature goal 99% (96.0-99.3) of the time in the normothermia protocol, 99.5% (99-100) in mild hypothermia, and 93% (80-100) for the moderate hypothermia protocol. Shivering was the most common adverse event (35%). Our results show that use of the gel-adhesive pad system for pediatric TTM is feasible, efficacious with regard to achieving both a short time to target temperature and maintaining temperature goal, and, in this limited sample, was free from major adverse events. We also defined several technical aspects of device use in pediatric patients that should be considered in future trial design and/or clinical use. Further studies are needed to determine if this device is superior to other cooling devices for temperature management in the pediatric population.

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