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Volume 187, Issue 3, Pages 363-371 (March 2004)


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Pathophysiologic changes and effects of hypothermia on outcome in elective surgery and trauma patients

Frank Hildebrand, M.D.aCorresponding Author Informationemail address, Peter V Giannoudis, M.D.b, Martijn van Griensven, Ph.D.a, Mayur Chawda, F.R.C.S. (Ed.)cd, Hans-Christoph Pape, M.D.a

Received 5 December 2002; received in revised form 1 June 2003

Abstract 

Generally, hypothermia is defined as a core temperature <35°C. In elective surgery, induced hypothermia has beneficial effects. It is recommended to diminish complications attributable to ischemia reperfusion injury. Experimental studies have shown that hypothermia during hemorrhagic shock has beneficial effects on outcome. In contrast, clinical experience with hypothermia in trauma patients has shown accidental hypothermia to be a cause of posttraumatic complications. The different etiology of hypothermia might be one reason for this disparity because induced therapeutic hypothermia, with induction of poikilothermia and shivering prevention, is quite different from accidental hypothermia, which results in physiological stress. Other studies have shown evidence that this contradictory effect is related to the plasma concentration of high-energy phosphates (e.g., adenosine triphosphate [ATP]). Induced hypothermia preserves ATP storage, whereas accidental hypothermia causes depletion. Hypothermia also has an impact on the immunologic response after trauma and elective surgery by decreasing the inflammatory response. This might have a beneficial effect on outcome. Nevertheless, posttraumatic infectious complications may be higher because of an immunosuppressive profile. Further studies are needed to investigate the impact of induced hypothermia on outcome in trauma patients.

a Trauma Department, Medical School Hanover, Carl-Neuberg-Strasse 1, 30625 Hanover, Germany

b St. James University Hospital, Leeds, England, UK

c Arbeitsgemeinschaft Osteosynthese Research Fellow, Hanover, Germany

d Association for the Study of Internal Fixation (ASIF), Davos Platz, Switzerland

Corresponding Author InformationCorresponding author. Tel.: +49 511 532 2050; fax: +49 511 532 5877.

PII: S0002-9610(03)00594-4

doi:10.1016/j.amjsurg.2003.12.016


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