0521779407-09 CUNY1086/Karliner 0 521 77940 7 June 4, 2007 21:13
768 Hyperthermia
■Severe hyperthermia (>40◦C): confusion, delirium, stupor, or coma;
hyperpnea and hyperventilation; petechiae from DIC; red urine from
rhabdomyolysis
■Heat stroke: temperature >40.6◦C with altered mental status and
anhidrosis
■Malignant hyperthermia of anesthesia, neuroleptic malignant
syndrome: temp often >41◦C, muscle rigidity, hypotension, arrhyth-
mias, hypoxia, extrapyramidal abnormalities, altered consciousness
■Heart rate increases by 8 bpm/1◦C increase in temperature in young
healthy individuals
■Intravascular volume contraction very common
tests
Diagnostic Tests
■Check CBC with differential, electrolytes, renal panel, glucose, cal-
cium, coagulation profile, DIC panel, creatinine kinase, LFTs, arterial
blood gas, urinalysis, and ECG
■Azotemia, elevated liver, muscle enzymes, hemoconcentration,
leukocytosis, thrombocytosis common with temperature 38.6–40◦C
■Hypoxia, respiratory alkalosis, metabolic acidosis, hypokalemia,
hypernatremia, hypophosphatemia, hypomagnesemia and hypo-
glycemia occur with temperature >40◦C; renal failure, hepatic fail-
ure, rhabdomyolysis, and DIC less frequent; rhabdomyolysis more
common in exertional hyperthermia
■Lactate elevated in exertional heat stroke; often normal in classical
heat stroke
Other Tests as Appropriate
■Screen for drugs of abuse
■Cultures, esp in older patients with preexisting medical conditions
■Malignant hyperthermia of anesthesia: caffeine-halothane contrac-
ture test useful for susceptibility screening; formal diagnosis requires
muscle biopsy
differential diagnosis
n/a
management
What to Do First
■Confirm hyperthermia.