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Journal Article

Citation

Eshel GM, Safar P, Sassano J, Stezoski SW. Resuscitation 1998; 37(3): 189-195.

Affiliation

Assaf Harofeh Medical Center (Sackler Faculty of Medicine), Tel-Aviv University, Zerifin, Israel.

Copyright

(Copyright © 1998, Elsevier Publishing)

DOI

unavailable

PMID

9715779

Abstract

Prolonged heat exposure as in hot tub bathing, although frequently practiced, has occasionally resulted in fatalities that have been explained by an underlying disease. We explored the tolerance of hot water immersion of 60 min in five previously healthy animals (three dogs and two monkeys). With invasive monitoring, experimental body immersion in water at 40-45 degrees C, with core temperature kept at 40-42 degrees C for 60 min, caused no significant cardiovascular, pulmonary or metabolic changes during hyperthermia or for 2 h after return to normothermia. Then secondary deterioration occurred with progressive hypotension, petechial hemorrhages throughout the viscera, gross gastrointestinal hemorrhages and irreversible (hypovolemic) shock. These effects occurred earlier in the monkeys than in the dogs. This shock state did not respond to standard resuscitation attempts. One dog survived the secondary shock state. We conclude that during and after hot tub immersion, good initial tolerance to heat exposure can, several hours after return of normothermia, result in delayed secondary deterioration and death. We recommend that the mechanism of this delayed shock state with apparent capillary leakage be clarified.


Language: en

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