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- Chris J S Cairns and Peter J D Andrews.
- Specialist Registrar in Intensive Care Medicine and Reader in Anesthetics, Intensive Care, and Pain Medicine, Western General Hospital, University of Edinburgh, Edinburgh, Scotland, UK.
- Curr Opin Crit Care. 2002 Apr 1; 8 (2): 106-10.
AbstractRecently there has been much interest in the use of hypothermia in the management of the brain-injured patient and its effect on outcome. Most of these studies examine the use of hypothermia compared with normothermia of 37 degrees C and have failed to demonstrate a benefit in the treatment groups, but what is normothermia in the brain-injured patient? Good epidemiologic evidence suggests that the vast majority of patients admitted to an ICU environment will develop a fever. The development of fever is clearly associated with a worse prognosis. There is now a better understanding of the possible mechanism of harm of fever and the side effects of cooling. Several treatment options for controlling temperature are discussed. Despite a sound physiologic argument for controlling fever in the brain-injured patient, there is no evidence that doing so will improve outcome.
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