Published Aug 21, 2011
jrodhuskers
6 Posts
I was wondering if anyone can provide input on a hypothermia protocol for post arrest patients? At your facility are these patients 1:1 nursing? if so, how long? What facility do you work at that has 1:1 nursing?
jennjen512
53 Posts
I work at a facility in South Florida and these patients are 1:1 through the entire cooling and rewarming process. That is approximately 36 hours.
ZippyGBR, BSN, RN
1,038 Posts
given that a lot of these protocols require a level 3 critical care bed - because you are doing multisystem organ support it goes with the territory that they will be nursed 1:1 -
NicuGal, MSN, RN
2,743 Posts
Are you talking adults or peds? In NICU those patients are 2:1 for the first 24 hours (at least in our unit) then they are 1:1 for the rest of the time until they have been rewarmed for 24 hours.
Esme12, ASN, BSN, RN
20,908 Posts
Guideline of Care
Increased brain temperature contributes to ischemic brain damage in patients post cardiac arrest. Studies have shown that lowering brain temperature, even by a few degrees decreases, ischemic damage. In studies of out of hospital cardiac arrest, induced hypothermia protocols have contributed to improved neurological outcomes.
Patient Selection
Patients who have been shown to benefit from induced hypothermia include:
Relative Exclusion Criteria
Patients in whom hypothermia may come with increased risk include those with:
Induced hypothermia after PEA, asystolic, or in-hospital arrest has not been studied, but may be applied at the discretion of the treating physicians. Induced hypothermia is not recommended for patients with an isolated respiratory arrest.
Goal: If criteria are met, the patient is cooled using the induced hypothermia protocol for 24 hours to a goal temperature of 32-34° C (89-93° F). The patient should be cooled to the target temperature as quickly as possible. The 24-hour time period is from the time of initiation of cooling (i.e. NOT the time the target temperature is reached).
Preparation
Shivering, our body's attempt at maintaining homeostasis, is a concern when trying to achieve a hypothermic state. Shivering is considered very uncomfortable, and it generates heat, thereby impairing the ability to achieve the target temperature. Additionally, the resultant energy expenditure is likely detrimental to the metabolic status of the acutely injured brain. Thus, it is necessary to sedate and paralyze the patient for the duration of the therapy.
Cooling must be done rapidly to achieve maximum effectiveness, and should be instituted as early as possible. Most studies have found it necessary to use both cooling blankets and ice packs to achieve the temperature goal. Other methods such as ice lavage, cold saline infusion, etc. may be used to help achieve target temperature. The most rapid methods of cooling include the use of surface cooling systems (e.g. Arctic Sun) or intravascular cooling device systems.
[*]It is recommended that a secondary temperature device (Exergen) be used to also monitor temperature. The bladder probe is only accurate when there is adequate urine output; therefore, an alternative to the bladder temperature probe is required in the setting of oliguria. This alternative temperature probe can be any core temperature monitor that is compatible with the Arctic Sun console.
Methods
[*]External cooling with Arctic Sun Vest Device:
Supportive Therapy
Re-warming
The re-warming phase may be the most critical, as peripheral beds, which were once constricted, start to dilate. This shift sometimes causes hypotension. The literature recommends that the body be re-warmed at a rate no faster than 0.5°F every hour. It will take the patient about 8 - 12 hours to passively re-warm.
At 24 hours (after the initiation of cooling):
Controlled Re-warming:
If the Arctic Sun cooling vest is being used, the machine can be programmed for controlled rewarming over 6-8 hours. Dial in the desired warming rate on the machine. The device should be programmed to maintain a target temp of 37°C (98.6°F) for the next 48 hours (72 hours total).
http://www.sld.cu/galerias/pdf/sitios/anestesiologia/huppost-cardiacarresthypothermiaprotocol.pdf
When I worked.....patients were 1:1's throughout the whole process and for 24 hours post normathermia.
PediNurse3
142 Posts
When I worked in the ER we would initiate the hypothermia protocol for post-arrest patients and near drownings and they were 1:1...but we would usually wind up having two extra people help us (the CV clinician was always there, and others would jump in as needed until we could get them upstairs!).
When I moved on to the PICU I only ever saw it used for near drownings...but that might be because the percentage of patients that presented with actual cardiac arrest was so small. They were 1:1 from the cooling was intiated until they were warm.
Thanks Esme 12! If anyone can send me nursing guidelines for staffing for this protocol, it would be helpful. I am on a mission to get these patients on 1:1 at my medical center. Right now, we are required to take another ICU patient with these post arrest patients.
They can look at the protocol and honestly believe that both patients can be care for effectively and safely? That with all involved in the care of the hypothermic patient that having another patient is OK? and that the other patient will fell they got excellent care while in ICU?
That makes me sad....
http://www.aacn.org/WD/CETests/Media/ACC2042.pdf
http://www.nursinginmaine.org/ccu.php
http://www.sh.lsuhsc.edu/policies/policy_manuals_via_ms_word/Nursing/Critical%20Care%20Guidelines/Therapeutic%20HypothermiaEDICU%20Guideline.pdf
http://www.med.upenn.edu/resuscitation/hypothermia/documents/HUPNursingHypothermiaProtocol.pdf
Brucenet2000
At what point do you generally treat bradycardia in the therapeutic induced hypothermic paitent? And do you generally start with vasopressors? At what point do you reverse cooling related to bradycardia? Thanks! I'm strugging to find good evidence online as to what is best recommended and when........... so looking for some real world thoughts!
I work with neonates, but we are pretty tolerant of bradycardia unless it is causing hemodynamic Issues. We will try bolusing and use dopamine to keep them stable. Our kids will have a HR in the 60's at times...totally freaks us out lol. We try to keep them as stable as possible so they can have the full 72 hours of cooling. If they were to have extremely low HR we would warm them by a degree to see if that helps, but that can cause more hemodynamic issues as their BP can tank when warmed.
Citigyrl
34 Posts
What is the theory behind allowing a patient to return to a stable core temp before paralytics are discontinued? I know as long as I have used paralytics, I was always taught to wait until pt body temp is normal before ever turning off a paralytic. Most post-cardiac hypothermic protocols mention this but I don't see an explanation as to why.
MunoRN, RN
8,058 Posts
I guess the question is why would you have to continue them prior to completion of re-warming. I've used a couple different protocols, and both used paralytics only in the cooling stage to override shivering, which isn't usually still present once the patient reaches goal temp.