• Intern Emerg Med · Dec 2017

    Accidental hypothermia: factors related to long-term hospitalization. A retrospective study from northern Finland.

    • Jari Pirnes and Tero Ala-Kokko.
    • Division of Intensive Care Medicine, and Medical Research Center Oulu, Department of Anaesthesiology, Oulu University Hospital and Research Group of Surgery, Anaesthesiology and Intensive Care, Medical Faculty, University of Oulu, Box 21, OUH, 90029, Oulu, Finland. jari.pirnes@fimnet.fi.
    • Intern Emerg Med. 2017 Dec 1; 12 (8): 1225-1233.

    AbstractAccidental hypothermia has a low incidence, but is associated with a high mortality rate. Knowledge about concomitant factors, complications, and length of hospital stay is limited. A retrospective cohort study on patients with accidental hypothermia admitted to Oulu University Hospital in Finland, over a 5-year period. Patients were categorized as short-stay patients (7 days or less) and long-stay patients (more than 7 days) according to their length of stay in hospital. From a total of 105 patients, 67 patients were included in the analyses. Alcohol abuse was the most common concomitant factor (54 %). Median length of hospital stay was 4 days, and 16 patients (24 %) stayed in hospital over 7 days (median 15 days). Thirty-day mortality was low (14/105, 13 %). Patients with long-term hospitalization had a lower initial temperature (28.4 versus 31.2 °C, p = 0.011), a lower level of consciousness (GCS score 8.4 versus 12.8, p = 0.003), more severe acidosis (pH 7.08 versus 7.28, p = 0.005, and lactate 7.2 versus 3.9, p = 0.043), and a lower level of platelets (183 versus 242, p = 0.041) on admission compared with short-stay patients. Thirty-six patients (54 %) had at least one complication, and this prolonged median hospital treatment for 2.5 days (p < 0.001). Alcohol is the most common concomitant factor and every fourth patient spends more than 7 days in hospital. Long-term hospitalization is related to a lower core temperature, lower consciousness, more severe lactic acidosis, lower platelet level and infections, rhabdomyolysis, and renal failure.

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