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Shared Science - Wilderness & Environmental Medicine
WEM and The Journal of Special Operations Medicine (JSOM) participate in a shared science program. This opportunity is made possible through a reciprocal partnership between the journals. Click here to see the JSOM articles selected for WEM readers, please visit:
2 Results
- Case Report
Successful Nonextracorporeal Life Support Resuscitation and Rewarming of a Patient with Hypothermia in Cardiac Arrest
Wilderness & Environmental MedicineVol. 33Issue 4p476–478Published online: September 27, 2022- Anshul Bhatnagar
- Sean Mackman
Cited in Scopus: 0We report full recovery of a patient with hypothermia in cardiac arrest following continuous and prolonged cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) and conventional, nonextracorporeal life support (non-ECLS) methods. A 57-y-old man presented with unwitnessed cardiac arrest and a core temperature of 23°C (73°F). The presenting cardiac rhythm was ventricular fibrillation. The team administered epinephrine and performed defibrillation and CPR. Because ECLS was unavailable at the facility, the medical team externally and internally rewarmed the patient using heated blankets, forced warmed air, thoracic lavage, and warmed IV fluids. - Case Report
Successful Defibrillation at a Core Temperature of 18.2 Degrees Celsius
Wilderness & Environmental MedicineVol. 31Issue 2p230–234Published online: April 21, 2020- Sylweriusz Kosiński
- Anna Drzewiecka
- Mathieu Pasquier
- Krzysztof S. Gołba
- Paweł Podsiadło
- Rafał Drwiła
- and others
Cited in Scopus: 2Both the temperature at which defibrillation can be effectively used and how often it should be repeated in severe accidental hypothermia have not been definitely established. Current recommendations are based mainly on expert opinion and suggest withholding defibrillation after 3 shocks when the core temperature is below 30°C (86°F). However, growing evidence supports the effectiveness of defibrillation in patients with a core temperature below 30°C (86°F). We present a case of successful defibrillation of a 54-y-old, severely hypothermic patient with a core temperature of 18.2°C (64.8°F).