Hyperthemia and Rapid Cooling

There are a number of causes for hyperthermia that isn’t just fever and r/o sepsis. There is certainly environmental hyperthermia – particularly the elderly in poorly or non- air-conditioned buildings, the runner training for a marathon, and the lost hiker.

Today though, I want to focus on sympathomimetics and psychostimulants. In these settings, rapid cooling is often needed as there is high mortality if not cooled promptly. 

Sympathomimetic/psychostimulant highlights:

  • hyperthermia, mydriasis, tachycardia, diaphoresis, hypertension, agitation, psychosis

  • cocaine, PCP, amphetamines, MDMA, LSD, bath salts, etc.

  • can get the phenomenon of “excited delirium” where there is excess catecholamines and/or overstimulation of dopamine and NMDA receptors

 

In clinical practice…

-Get a rectal temp to asses someone’s core temperature!

-High body temperatures can cause protein unraveling, severe rhabdo -> AKI ->hyperkalemia

-When agitated and hyperthemic, consider benzodiazepines or dissociating with ketamine as we are trying to stop hypermetabolism and muscle contractions that generate further heat.

-If intubation is needed, rocuronium > succylcholine to avoid hyperkalemia.

-Ways to rapidly cool somebody: remove clothing, cold IV fluids, ice packs, ice baths, and even bladder irrigation.

-With an ice or cold water bath, you can cool somebody and drop their temperature about 3°F for every 5 min in the bath.

ice bucket.jpg

How might we set up an ice bath here at Maimonides? Get a body bag from the charge nurse, place the patient in it, grab ice from the ice machine if it’s working (inevitably 2 out of 3 machines in the department aren’t) or go to 3-in-1 and borrow their ice (order an iced coffee with just ice, no coffee). Place the ice in the body bag with the patient, or perhaps in large biohazard bags filled with ice around the patient.

Lastly, the evidence for dantrolene when rapid cooling is needed is very limited/non-existent. It’s expensive. It’s efficacy is mostly anecdotal. That being said, some of our event medicine teams have used it in the past at music festivals for excited delirium patients.  

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Prescription Drug Prices

Prescription drug prices are highly variable and out of control in the United States. Often times, we will find ourselves telling a patient they should see their PMD and take all their medications, or we’ll be prescribing a medication for a newly diagnosed chronic condition. Whether or not our patients follow our advice is dependent on dozens of socioeconomic factors, but one of those is the price of prescription medications.

 

I was curious about the prices our patients face for some of the common medications we often send them home with or expect them sometimes for the rest of their lives. Of course, insurance is a whole other issue, but these are just some of the upfront costs that particularly our most vulnerable and socioeconomically destitute patients may face:

 

*prices listed are the lowest price at a pharmacy within 5 miles of the hospital

Albuterol HFA inhaler, $22.14

Amlodipine 5mg, 30 tabs, $5.20

Amoxicillin 400mg/5mL, 100mL bottle, $9.45

Atorvastatin 10, 30 tabs, $6.27

Azithromycin 250, Z pack with 6 tablets, $9.49

Cephalexin 500mg, 30 tabs, $10.86

Ciprofloxacin 500mg, 20 tabs, $17.42

Clopidogrel 75mg, 30 tabs, $6.60

Doxycycline 100mg, 30 tabs, $19.46

Divalproex 500mg, 30 tabs, $14.41

Furosemide 40mg, 30 tabs, $5.10

Gabapentin 300mg, 30 tabs, $6.07

HCTZ 12.5, 30 tabs, $5.58

Ibuprofen 400mg, 30 tabs, $6.65

Levothyroxine 50mcg, 30 tabs, $10.72

Lisinopril 20mg, 30 tabs, $4.99

Metformin 500mg 30 tabs, $4.99

Nitrofurantoin 100mg, 14 tabs, $18.64

Omeprazole 20mg, 30 tabs, $7.47

Prednisone 10mg, 21 tabs, $14.29

Tamsulosin 0.4mg, 30 tabs, $7.77

 

Drug prices are extremely hard to track down. For instance, the NYS DOH website for searching drug prices hasn’t updated their list of prices for our MMC Pharmacy since 2013.

Our wonderful ED pharmacist Ankit Gohel also pointed out to me that you can look up the average wholesale price of any medication on uptodate in the ‘price’ section.

The Epocrates app will also list average retail prices.

Hope this can be some food for thought.

 

Source: www.communitycaresrx.com

https://apps.health.ny.gov/pdpw/SearchDrugs/Home.action

https://www.goodrx.com/

 

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Drowning and Submersion Injuries

For today's POTD, we're going to talk about drowning/submersion injuries. Hopefully you don't have to take care of a jet-skiier that gets pulled out of the East river this weekend, but in case you do, here's some tips to prepare you!

Epidemiology: 20% of deaths involve children < 14 yo, a leading cause of death in children < 5yo, typically in swimming pools, bathtubs, buckets. 

History of seizures and cardiac disease increases the risk of drowning.

Bimodal distribution with second peak usually (80%) in males 15-25 yo, alcohol involved in up to 70% of cases. Typically rivers, lakes, beaches.

Pathophys: Fluid aspiration => loss of surfactant, pulmonary edema, hypoxemia from V/Q mismatch

ED Management: ACLS if in cardiac arrest, it is usually a respiratory arrest. Remove wet clothing and use rewarming techniques. Initial CXR often normal. Assess for signs of trauma. C-spine injuries are uncommon (<5%) but still evaluate for trauma especially if unwitnessed event. Intubate if O2 sat < 90% despite supplemental O2, PaO2 < 60, or PaCO2>50 as hypoxemia is the major issue. If able to protect airway, BIPAP for positive pressure.

Fresh water vs. salt water drowning distinctions do not matter much because you need to aspirate more than 11mL/kg of body weight to get blood volume changes and even more to get electrolyte changes. Most nonfatal drowning victims aspirate at most 3-4 mL/kg.

Meds: none really helpful, it is supportive care. Steroids and antibiotics have not been shown to help.

Dispo: admit if any symptoms on arrive to hospital, at least for monitoring. If asymptomatic after a near drowning, monitor for at least 4-6 hours.  

Sources

https://www.nuemblog.com/blog/drowning

https://www.saem.org/cdem/education/online-education/m4-curriculum/group-m4-environmental/drowing

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