• Pediatr Crit Care Me · May 2011

    Induction and maintenance of therapeutic hypothermia after pediatric cardiac arrest: efficacy of a surface cooling protocol.

    • Alexis Topjian, Larissa Hutchins, Mary Ann DiLiberto, Nicholas S Abend, Rebecca Ichord, Mark Helfaer, Robert A Berg, and Vinay Nadkarni.
    • Department of Anesthesia, Critical Care, and Pediatrics, The Children's Hospital of Philadelphia (CHOP), University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine, Philadelphia, PA, USA. topjian@email.chop.edu
    • Pediatr Crit Care Me. 2011 May 1;12(3):e127-35.

    ObjectiveTo assess the feasibility, effectiveness, side effects, and adverse events associated with a standardized surface cooling protocol. Induced therapeutic hypothermia after pediatric cardiac arrest is an important intervention.DesignProspective intervention trial.SettingUrban, tertiary care children's hospital.PatientsTwelve pediatric cardiac arrest survivors.InterventionsStandardized surface cooling protocol.Measurements And Main ResultsPatients (age: median, 1.5 yrs; interquartile range, 0.5-6.25; cardiopulmonary resuscitation duration: median, 18 mins; interquartile range, 10-45) were cooled by a standard surface cooling protocol for rapid induction and maintenance of goal rectal temperature (T) 32°C-34°C for 24 hrs, with prospectively defined rescue protocols. Side effects and clinical interventions were recorded. Median time to rectal T ≤34°C was 1.5 (1, 1.5) hrs from cooling initiation and 6 (5, 6.5) hrs from arrest. T was documented every 30 mins. Maintenance target T 32°C-34°C was attained in 78% (414 of 531) of measurements, overshoot hypothermia <32°C in 15% (81 of 531), and overshoot hyperthermia >34°C in 7% (36 of 531). Mean bias between rectal vs. esophageal T was -0.42°C (95% confidence interval, -0.49 to -0.35), and between rectal and bladder T was 0.16°C (95% confidence interval, 0.11-0.22). Side effects observed included: hypokalemia <3.0 mEq/L in 67% of patients and bradycardia <2% for age in 58%. There were no episodes of bleeding or ventricular tachyarrhythmia that required treatment. Six (50%) of 12 patients survived to discharge.ConclusionsA standard surface cooling protocol achieved rapid induction of hypothermia after pediatric cardiac arrest. During maintenance of hypothermia, 78% of measures were within target T 32°C-34°C. Commonly employed temperature sites (esophageal, rectal, and bladder) were similar. Overshoot hypothermia and associated side effects were common, but there were no serious adverse events attributable to induced therapeutic hypothermia in this case series. Surface cooling protocols to induce and maintain therapeutic hypothermia after pediatric cardiac arrest are potentially feasible.

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