Hypothermia Flashcards

1
Q

Criteria for cooling?

A

>= 36 weeks who are =< 6 hours old and meet A or B and C

Consider in >= 35 weeks

A. cord pH =< 7.0 or BE >= -16 OR

B. pH 7.01-7.15 or base deficit -10 to -15.9 on cord gas or blood gas within 1 H AND

  1. Hx of acute perinatal event (such as but not limited to cord prolapse, placental abruption or uterine rupture) AND
  2. Apgar score =< 5 at 10 min or at least 10 min of PPV

C. Evidence of moderate-to-severe encephalopathy, demonstrated by presence of seizures OR at least one sign in 3 or more of the 6 categories below:

Cooling may be deferred if an infant’s neurological status has fully returned to normal within 30-45 minutes after birth

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2
Q

Exclusion criteria for cooling in neonates

A
  • moribund infants/infants with congenital or genetic abnormalities
  • severe IUGR
  • significant coagulopathy
  • severe head trauma or intracranial bleeding
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3
Q

Side effects of hypothermia

A
  • sinus brady (HR 80-100)
  • hypotension (possibly need inotropes)
  • PPHN with impaired oxygenation
  • mild thrombocytopenia
  • prolong bleeding time
  • subcutaneous fat necrosis with or without hypercalcemia
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4
Q

Stop hypothermia and rewarm if:

(happens in <10% of cases)

A
  • hypotension despite inotropic support
  • PPHN with hypoxemia despite adquate treatment
  • clinically significant coagulopathy despite treatment
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5
Q

Infants with HIE at risk for:

A
  • arrhythmia
  • anemia
  • leukopenia
  • hypoglycemia
  • hypokalemia
  • urinary retention
  • coagulopathy
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6
Q

How do you provide hypothermia for neonates?

(start from community hospital)

A

COMMUNITY HOSPITAL

  • Passive cooling while awaiting transport (remove hat, blanket, and turn off overhead warmer)
    • do not use ice packs
    • monitor temp q15 min to ensure temp doesn’t decrease below 33

COOLING

  • Two setups:
    • whole body cooling to rectal temp 33.5 +/- 0.5
      • recommended preferentially
    • Head cooling to 34.5 +/- 0.5
  • Cool for 72 hours
  • Rewarm over 6-12 hours; by 0.5 q1-2 hours
    • if seizures and worsening of clinical encephalopathy —> recool for 24 hours
  • Brain imaging
    • once rewarming has finished, on day of life 4 or 5
    • Consider repeat on DOL 10-14 when imaging and clinical features discordant or when diagnostic ambiguity persists
  • Follow up at 18-24 months with multi-D team
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7
Q

What percent of babies with HIE post cooling have CP or severe disability

A
  • CP or severe disability > 30% of HIE affected newborns
  • cognitive deficits, vison, sensorineural hearing loss, epilepsy
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8
Q

How do you rewarm a baby post cooling?

A
  • Rewarm over 6-12 hours; by 0.5 q1-2 hours
  • if seizures and worsening of clinical encephalopathy —> recool for 24 hours
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9
Q

What are adjunctive therapies to cooling in neonates with HIE?

A
  • Analgesic
    • Longer serum clearance of morphine, fentanyl, and midaz
    • low infusion of morphine =< 10 mcg/kg/h or equivalent opioid is recommended as initial approach
  • Antiepileptic
    • use cautiously but treat neonatal seizures
    • serum levels in first 72 hours
  • Minimal enteral feeding (10-20 ml/kg/d) during hypothermia
    • more than minimal feeds not safe because decreased gut perfusion
  • Aim for normal everything
    • Minimize fluctuations in CO2, avoid hyperoxia, ensure adequate tissue perfusion with appropriate pressors/inotropes, normal BG, treat hyperbili, minimize handling
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