-
- S Steinemann, S R Shackford, and J W Davis.
- Division of Trauma, University of California, San Diego Medical Center.
- J Trauma. 1990 Feb 1;30(2):200-2.
AbstractHypothermia is common after severe injury, and has been associated with an increased mortality rate in patients stratified by anatomic indices of injury severity. In this retrospective study of 173 patients, early post-traumatic hypothermia was found to correlate with physiologic indicators of volume deficit, independently of the amount of intravenous fluid received. There was no correlation found between admission core temperature and time from injury, blood alcohol, or presence of severe closed head injury. Hypothermic patients (less than 35 degrees C) had a lower predicted probability of survival and a higher mortality rate than euthermic patients (greater than or equal to 35 degrees C). However, when patients were stratified by physiologic and anatomic indicators of injury severity, mortality rates among the euthermic and hypothermic patients were not significantly different. Early post-traumatic hypothermia does not appear to exert an independent effect upon outcome.
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