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107. Unsure of cause- pt had been septic in the past but a temp that high is usually not related to an infectious process. Likely a neurogenic cause. Tylenol was ineffective. Did blood cultures, pt already on broad spectrum antibiotics. Used a cooking blanket to bring temp down. Family discontinued care a few days later and pt passed.
A patient had pneumonia. After her bronchoscopy we watched her temperature rise (she had her temperature monitored with a foley temperature) from 38.5 to 41.1 It took a while for the IV tylenol to get delivered, so I used ice packs.
The RT said that sometimes patients decompensate after bronchoscopies.
Young male who was involved in a forest fire fighting scene, heat stroke. Not burned at all, but had had a temp of 108+F when brought in to the ER. We, the critical care transport team, arrived at the small community hospital to take him to our big university shop about four hours later. He was bleeding everywhere, as the hyperthermia had pretty well cooked his platelets and other proteins. They did get him cooled but he was a mess. We kept trying but couldn't stabilize him before transport so we finally just said, the hell with it, let's just boogie outta here and get him home. We got him to our place but by then he looked like someone with Ebola, bleeding from absolutely everywhere-- eyes, mouth, gut, urine, nose, ears, IV sites, the works ... he was dead about ten hours later, not a mark on him except the IV sites.
107. Unsure of cause- pt had been septic in the past but a temp that high is usually not related to an infectious process. Likely a neurogenic cause. Tylenol was ineffective. Did blood cultures, pt already on broad spectrum antibiotics. Used a cooking blanket to bring temp down. Family discontinued care a few days later and pt passed.
I hope you meant "cooling." Seems like cooking was already happening.
SwansonRN
465 Posts
I am curious about your patients with extreme hyperthermia. What was their Tmax? What was the cause (environmental, drugs, infection...) and did the patient survive? I have been very interested in the patho behind high fevers ever since a very challenging case I had a few weeks ago.