Frostbite Mark Johnston, RN BSN Manager, Burn Program Regions - - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Frostbite Mark Johnston, RN BSN Manager, Burn Program Regions - - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Frostbite Mark Johnston, RN BSN Manager, Burn Program Regions Hospital St. Paul, MN QUESTION? At what temperature does both the Fahrenheit & Celsius scales converge? (i.e., the same number) Welcome to Minnesota Types of Cold Injuries


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Frostbite

Mark Johnston, RN BSN

Manager, Burn Program Regions Hospital

  • St. Paul, MN
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QUESTION?

At what temperature does both the Fahrenheit & Celsius scales converge? (i.e., the same number)

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Welcome to Minnesota

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Types of Cold Injuries

  • Local cold injury

– Rapid freezing – cold contact or flash freeze injury – Slow freezing – true frostbite

  • Systemic hypothermia may be LEATHAL
  • 40% of patients with a local cold injury present

with synchronous hypothermia

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Definition of Systemic Hypothermia

  • Mild

Core temp 90 - 95°F

  • Moderate

Core temp 85 - 90°F

  • Severe

Core temp below 85°F

  • Symptomatic definition

– Mild - shivering, confusion – Moderate - no shivering, somnolence, combativeness, bradycardia – Severe - coma, arrhythmias, then asystole

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Dangers of Hypothermia

  • If frozen extremities are warmed rapidly in a

hypothermic patient, the blood returning to the heart is cold

  • The patient’s core temperature drops rapidly

and cardiac arrest is a real risk, especially in a hypovolemic patient

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Mild to Moderate Hypothermia

  • Immersion in tub is a quick, low tech option
  • Contraindications:

– CPR – Unstable fractures – Open wounds – Hemorrhage

  • Warming rates of 15-30°F per hour
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Unstable Hypothermia Patient

  • Volume expansion with warmed fluid
  • Pressors for severe hypotension
  • CPR only for asystole, not bradycardia
  • Warming options include previous measures

– Consider cardiopulmonary bypass – Warm 10-30°F per hour

  • CPR until core temperature is above 92°F
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Cold Injuries Have Changed History

  • Hannibal crossing the Alps - 218 BC

– Lost 20,000 of 46,000 men in 15 days

  • Napoleon's march to Moscow - 1812

– Left with 250,000 men, returned with 350

  • WW II - US lost 90,000 men
  • Korean War - 10% of U.S. casualties due to

cold

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Who Gets Cold Injuries?

  • The intoxicated (alcohol, other drugs)
  • The incompetent (mental illness / dementia)
  • The infirm (elderly, esp. with falls)
  • The insensate (neuropathy or paraplegia)
  • The inexperienced (new to cold climates)
  • The inducted (wartime increases risk)
  • The indigent
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Classical Treatment of Frostbite

  • Treat systemic hypothermia first
  • Rapidly re-warm body part in 104 °F water

– Rewarming HURTS! – Narcotics given intravenously

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  • Rapid Rewarming

– 104°F causes the least damage to frozen tissue – Slow warming leads to more ischemia – 40 percent of patients thaw their extremities before seeking medical attention

Rapid Rewarming

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Tissue Response after Thawing

  • Digit vessels vasodilate
  • Injured endothelial cells swell and embolize

into the capillary bed

  • The blood vessels develop a progressive

thrombosis

  • The ischemic skin develops bullae after a few

hours, and nail beds become dark

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Standard Treatment Protocol for Frostbite During Thawing

  • Monitor for hypothermia using a Foley with

temperature sensor

  • Narcotics IV for pain control
  • Oral ibuprofen for one week
  • Brief bed rest/elevate extremities
  • Deflate bullae
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Frostbite Pearl

You can not predict the severity of injury

  • n a frozen extremity.

The skin is …

  • White
  • Firm
  • Cold
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Frostbite Appearance

Before thawing After rapid rewarming

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Cooling skin

Tissue freezing to ambient temp. Frozen tissue (anoxia)

H2O H2O

Phases of Frostbite

epidermis dermis

Cooling skin Cooling skin

50°F to 28°F

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What type of injury is this?

  • Freeze injury?
  • Location?
  • Rapid or slow?

Flash Freeze

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Ambient temp. to 28°F 28°F to H2O bath temp. Rewarming complete Post- rewarming

edema fluid H2O H2O blister formation O2- OH• PGF2α TXA2 PGF2α TXA2

dermis epidermis

Phases of Frostbite

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Injuries from Frostbite

  • Freezing:

– Cessation of blood flow – Ice crystals form and damage cells

  • Thawing:

– Damage to cells if perfusion occurs before ice melts

  • Reperfusion:

– Injured endothelial cells swell and embolize into the capillary bed – The blood vessels develop a progressive thrombosis

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Frostbite Pearl

You can not predict the severity of injury

  • f a rewarmed extremity with frostbite.

Blisters mean…

  • What??
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Prognostic Signs in Frostbite

  • Sensation
  • Hyperema
  • Warm digits
  • Clear blebs
  • No sensation
  • Cyanosis
  • Cool digits
  • Hemorrhagic blebs

which don’t reach tips

Good Prognosis Poor Prognosis

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Freeze - Thaw - Refreeze I njury

A: Large blisters absent B: 5 days after

injury

C: 4 weeks after injury

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Frostbite Pearl

What should do you do with blisters?

  • Blister fluid contains inflammatory mediators

(TxA2, PgF2α) - Hemorrhagic blisters do not

  • Once blister integrity is lost, pendulum swings

towards bacterial colonization of damaged skin

  • Avoid maceration of surrounding skin
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Classical Treatment of Frostbite

  • Treat systemic hypothermia first
  • Rapidly re-warm body part in 104 °F water with

narcotics given intravenously

  • Ibuprofen by mouth for one week
  • Topical aloe vera gel
  • Elevation, aspiration of skin bullae, padded footwear
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Early mobility with LE frostbite

  • Early vs Late mobility (at 72H post injury)
  • Retrospective,
  • Early n=16, Late n=25

– Lytics: Early 63%, Late 56%

  • Cellulitis was equivalent but a trend towards longer LOS

from cellulitis with Early (0.067)

  • LOS was unchanged (Early 11, Late 12)
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Definitive Treatment of Frostbite

  • Rewarming
  • Observation
  • Delayed Amputations

– “Frostbite in January, amputation in July”

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Frostbite Injury

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Frostbite Pearl

There is NO role for prophylactic antibiotics.

This has been studied in frostbite (as in burns) and found not to prevent infections.

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Bone Scan

  • Shows perfusion to soft tissues and bone
  • Evolution will occur in the first week

– Better accuracy if repeated in 5-7 days

  • Lace anatomic specificity for early OR plan
  • Advantages:

– Decreases infectious risk (1-3 months ) – Reduces time to maximal functional return – Psychological

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Angiography

  • Gold standard
  • Disadvantages:

– Invasive – Bleeding complications – Clotting complications – Vasospasm complications

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Hyperbaric Oxygen

First use in 1963 (Ledingham)

  • Case reports of improvement when

starting 5-10 days post injury

  • Vasoconstriction & decreased blood

flow in healthy volunteers

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Thrombolytics in Frostbite

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Reperfusion Injury with Frostbite

  • Digit vessels vasodilate
  • Endothelial cells slough
  • Progressive blood vessel thrombosis
  • The ischemic skin develops bullae

after a few hours, and nail beds become dark

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Evolution of Lytic Tx for Frostbite

  • Streptokinase in frostbite rabbits (1987)
  • 1989-94: pilot study at HCMC

(Minneapolis) using IA tPA in 6 pts with frostbite with good results (25% comps)

  • Since 1994, RCMC/RH pts with severe

frostbite undergo angio within 24H  lytics

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The St. Paul Experience

  • Rapid rewarming
  • For digits with reduced blood flow

– Angiogram – tPA and papaverine infusion – Repeat angiogram at 24 and 48 hours

  • Anticoagulation → Antiplatelet agents
  • Late (4-6 wk) amps for mummified digits
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Thrombolytic Agents in Frostbite

  • Urokinase is no longer available
  • Streptokinase - less efficient, very antigenic
  • Tissue plasminogen activator (TPA) converts

plasminogen → plasmin : dissolves clots

  • Tenecteplase (TNKase)

– A TPA that has a higher specificity for fibrin (vs. fibrinogen)

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Normal Hand Angiogram

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Admission Angiograms DOI

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Completion Angiograms PID 3

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Initial Images: FB to foot

Right foot

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Post 36H lytics

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The St. Paul Experience

Contraindications to Thromboytics

  • Lack of consent (patient or family)
  • Lack of cooperation - catheter trauma
  • Child - risk of catheter induced thrombosis
  • Recent trauma, CVA, bleeding d/o
  • Trauma or recent surgery - risk of bleeding
  • > 24H warm ischemia
  • Freeze-Thaw-Refreeze
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Regions Frostbite Data

Between 1991-2007, 133 frostbite patients

  • 70 angiography, 4 normal studies

– 66 received intra-arterial lytics – 482 digits were found to be at risk

  • 67 were treated with our conservative

protocol

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194 4 126 73 4 71

20 40 60 80 100 120 140 160 180 200 Distal blush Partial flow No flow No Amputation Amputation

IA Reperfusion vs Amputation

Digits with Abnormal Initial Angio

98% Salvage 63% Salvage 95% Amp

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SLIDE 57
  • Groin hematoma (sheath)

(6%)

  • None in the last 9 yrs
  • Acute renal failure –

(1.5%)

  • Compartment Syndrome –

(1.5%)

Complications

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Hospital Charges Following Lytics

Patients 1-7 Mean $61,600 Patients (1991-2007) 1-66 Mean $70,085

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  • In patients with severe frostbite →
  • Rapid rewarming +

Thrombolytic Tx if indicated

  • Protect from injury (bleeding)
  • > 24H of warm ischemic time has no

benefit from lytics

– The cutoff time is unknown

Summary

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  • 70% of digits at risk will be salvaged
  • 70% of patients required NO amputations

– The majority of amps were in nonresponders

  • Partial responders typically resulted in a

more distal amputation

– BKA vs. Forefoot Amputation

Prognosis

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Does this patient need lytics?

Before thawing After rewarming

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Sequelae of Frostbite

  • Cold intolerance with chronic pain (70%)
  • Vasospastic attacks
  • Joint stiffness, arthritis in 50% of adults
  • Re-injury is worse with second cold exposure

(2x increased risk of 2nd injury)

  • Growth plate abnormalities (kids)
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Frostbite Sequelae

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Frostbite Pearl

Some patients with successful lytic Tx and still require an amputation.

Chronic pain in the cartilage can debilitate a patient to the point that amputation for pain control is preferable.

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Frostbite Treatment Protocol

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Questions?

Mark.j.johnston@healthpartners.com