Journal of International Medical Research (Jan 2021)

Cardiac arrest caused by accidental severe hypothermia and myocardial infarction during general anesthesia

  • Dong Ho Park,
  • Tae Woo Kim,
  • Mo Se Kim,
  • Woong Han,
  • Da Eun Lee,
  • Gyu Seong Kim,
  • Chang Young Jeong

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1177/0300060520987945
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 49

Abstract

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Therapeutic hypothermia is often used for traumatic brain injury because of its neuroprotective effect and decreased secondary brain injury. However, this procedure lacks clinical evidence supporting its efficacy, and adverse outcomes have been reported during general anesthesia. A 61-year-old man with a history of percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI) was admitted with traumatic brain injury. Immediately after admission, he underwent mild therapeutic hypothermia with a target temperature of 33.0°C for neuroprotection. During general anesthesia for emergency surgery because he developed a mass effect, hypothermic cardiac arrest occurred following an additional decrease in the core body temperature. Moreover, myocardial infarction caused by restenosis of the previous PCI lesion also contributed to the cardiac arrest. Although the patient recovered spontaneous circulation after an hour-long cardiopulmonary resuscitation with rewarming, he eventually died of subsequent repetitive cardiac arrests. When anesthetizing patients undergoing therapeutic hypothermia, caution is required to prevent adverse outcomes that can be caused by unintentional severe hypothermia and exacerbation of underlying heart disease.