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Kevin Everett When Cold Is Hot Stuff
A great day for modern critical care as the young man who was injured Sunday was placed in a hypothermia (low body temperature) protocol we have been using in Sudden Death or Cardiac Arrest patients where the focus is to minimize the neurologic injury by slowing down metabolism and activity in nervous or brain tissue by lowering the body temperature to 32C following injury both from lowered blood flow and trauma. This ice box maneuver slows the actual injury that occurrs from swelling crushing neurons, which that takes place immediately post injury and for the next 24-48 hours after a trauma or as we use it a heart stopping arrest or V-Fib arrest. By immeidately lowering Mr Everetts body temperature after the impact on the field the neuroligic injury was minimized if not arrested. This is a great day in modern medicine and may have far reaching ramifications in many other "near death" diseases. If you remember the Andrew Lakeman case we had hoped this was possible for him but his cord was severed, Everett had trauma and a blood collection (hematoma) on his cord which was surgically removed. This kid will probably walk to his rehab....what an incredible thing!!! |
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Every day I start a conversation talking about what COULD be with severe illness like this. No family is ever going to be upset with you if you tell the truth about the possibilities and then the patient does better than expected. The amazing aspect of this story is that these neurosurgeons trusted their intensivists (critical care docs like myself) to TRY a therapy for one disease that is essentially brand new for one disease (cardiac arrest) and allow it to be used for the same postential gains (minimizing if not arresting injury taking place after the truama) with spinal cord trauma!!! Thes intensivists are heroes of the highest level because they just may have laid the ground work for us to save thousands of lives in other disease states. Last edited by docicu3 : 09-11-2007 at 08:03 PM. |
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He started spontaneous movement shortly afterward which required that the sedation be restarted because he was actually moving TOO much!!. A nice problem to have under the circumstances. |
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Weird how none of the articles make any mention of this, you have to click on the video link in the article to get the details. Pretty cool how Ralph Wilson supported this project with millions and ultimately it is one of his players that is saved by it. Amazing.
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You hit on why this is such a big deal....
It took alot of guts to use it and alot of smarts to apply it in this instance. This all came about in the most bizzare manner if anyone is really interested I'll post it but probably people have heard about as much from me on medical stuff as a horse racing site can stand.... It should not go underappreciated that this one application of this technology will open the door to save more lives than anything discovered in the last 10 years. The surgeon and the intensivist will be nominated for Nobel prizes in medicine.....and they should be!! |
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from what i've heard, kevin has a great attitude, and of course being an athlete in tip top shape can only help. i hope he makes a complete recovery--many times people were given a very dire prognosis, and amazed everyone.
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Books serve to show a man that those original thoughts of his aren't very new at all. Abraham Lincoln |
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Frikkn incredible if this works out...
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and from what I have gathered it was to stop the swelling more than anything that would damage his spinal cord further.
This really is cool (no pun) because this deep quick cold stuff without freezing tissue has been used in a lot of procedures before, heart etc... but they actually injected him with really cold saline. I was wondering how they could get the temp in that part of the body so low so quickly without trauma. Took a big chance. |
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voluntarily moving his arms and legs.
he still has a hell of a way to go, but this is a GREAT sign.
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Books serve to show a man that those original thoughts of his aren't very new at all. Abraham Lincoln |
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"Always keep your heads up and act like champions." Coach Paul Bryant |
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They had an interview with the Bills MVP (their punter Brian Moorman) on ESPN radio on my way home from work around 5. He was recapping his hospital visit and said how he told Everett he was going to be on ESPN radio and wanted to know what to tell them and said Everett's eyes just got this determined look. He asked him if he wanted him to tell them that he was going to beat it and Everett nodded his head. Then I guess later Everett's mother asked who they were playing next week and Moorman said Pittsburgh. At that point Everett got the same look in his eye and mouthed "win it" to them. This was all before he had regained any mobility. Pretty moving stuff, I guess if anyone can beat it this kid can.
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Docicu3, If you have time i would love to hear more about it. It really is amazing. My question though. Was this something that was done on the field/ambulance or was the IV inserted after he was in the hospital?
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Inveniemus viam aut faciemus |
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Might start seeing a setup to perform the procedure at all football stadiums I would think. Have to diagnose it properly first to take drastic quick action. |
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I read the same thing, but was wondering if that was a misquote or if thats a sop.
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Inveniemus viam aut faciemus |
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Just heard a Dr. from miami say they started the procedure within 15-20 minutes of the injury. Be interesting to see what doc says.
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Inveniemus viam aut faciemus |
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Essentially the way the cooling works is that the solution is literally taken from a refrigerator as most university level or tertiary (large hospitals with teaching programs) all keep stock supplies of multiple liters of this cold or saline (salt water) solution. All you do is run in 2 liters of this temperature saline into a catheter and we have essentially a 32 degree Celsius or 90F body within minutes. Healthy hearts like this young man handle the volume easily. To be brief the idea of hypothermia as "brain sparring" comes from a very simple observation. Under 2 conditions and 2 conditions only is a physician prohibited from declaring a patient dead!!! One is overdose or specifically phenobarbital overdose because phenobarb coma is a state very similiar to death .....very very.slow heart rate, low if not unmeasurable blood pressure etc...... The other is hypothermia......you aren't really dead no matter how long youv'e been without a heart beat unless you have been warmed to 90 degrees F. So unless you are warmed to 90F you are technically alive..... So why is that??? There are credible reports of people survivng incredible insults in frozen temperatures deprived of traditional levels of oxygen we think are compatible with life only to have the "frozen ice fisherman" or "drowned" child submersed in extreme cold actually survive if warmed in an environment where they could be placed on a respirator and supported. The neurologists of the world who's territory "death" is got sick and tired of these people coming back from the dead for lack of a better description and decided to try this "frozen state" as a therapy for heart attacks that lead to sudden stopping of a heart or sudden death. If we could start your heart and cool you to buy some time for the neurologic injury to subside as blood flow is re-established maybe we could use this to save lives. The trials show about a 12-20% improvement in mortality if 1) CPR and the code get things going "quickly" 2) You lower the temp to 32C within 4 hours of the code. Now you compare this to Mr Everett and it is easy to see why he did so well. 1) He was never really without a heart beat for an appreciable time 2) He was cooled instantly or within minutes. SO placing a central line is a common procedure done routinely by paramedics,surgeons,intensivists,cardiologists etc...and the solution to do this is kept on hand in most institutions. Enough for one night... |