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Drowning

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Title: Drowning


1
Drowning
  • Jana Stockwell, MD

2
Statistics
  • 1995 data
  • gt1000 kids lt14 years old drown
  • 60 lt4 years old
  • 2000 CDC data
  • 3,281 unintentional drownings in USA (adults
    kids)
  • averaging 9 people/day - not including
    boating-related incidents 
  • 2003 CDC data
  • For every child who drowns, 3 need ED care for
    non-fatal submersion injuries
  • gt40 of these children require hospitalization

3
2002 World Congress on Drowning
  • Drowning process resulting in primary
    respiratory impairment from submersion/immersion
    in a liquid medium
  • Regardless of survival
  • Drowning without aspiration does not occur
  • Terms which are out
  • Dry, wet, active, silent, secondary,
    near-drowning

4
1989-1998 CDC data
5
Groups at Risk (2001 data)
  • Males 78 of drownings in the United States
  • Children 859 children ages 0-14 years died from
    drowning
  • Drowning rates have slowly declined
  • 2nd-leading cause of injury-related death for
    kids ages 1-14 years 
  • African Americans age-adjusted drowning rate
    for African Americans was 1.4 X higher

(CDC 2003)
6
Morbidity Mortality
  • 15 of children admitted for drowning die in the
    hospital
  • As many as 20 of drowning survivors suffer
    severe, permanent neurological disability

7
Drowning modalities
  • Infants (age lt1) - bathtubs, buckets toilets
  • Children ages 1-4 years - swimming pools, hot
    tubs spas
  • Children ages 5-14 years - swimming pools open
    water sites

(Brenner 2001)
8
Bucket drownings
  • 300 children in the US since 1984
  • 7-15 months of age
  • 24 to 31 inches tall
  • Bucket may contain water or nasty cleaning fluid

9
Tub drownings
  • Approximately 10 of childhood drownings
  • Typically lacking adult supervision
  • Do tub seats help?

10
Bathtub seats - ?? or ??
  • Not intended or marketed as safety devices
  • Bathtub drowning deaths of infants aged 6-10 mo
    from 1994-1998
  • 40 infant drowning deaths associated with bath
    seats
  • 78 deaths not associated with bath seats
  • 45 of infants in this age group use bath seats
  • Data suggests seats either have no effect or they
    may provide some slight protection against
    unintentional bathtub drowning risks
  • Odds ratio 0.6 95 CI 0.4-0.9

Data US Consumer Product Safety Commission
National Center for Health Statistics for US
resident infants (1994-1998)
11
Tub seat use
12
Baby swim classes
  • Done to teach babies to float
  • No reported drownings in class
  • Several reports of hyponatremic seizures
    following class (How was school today?)
  • False sense of security?

13
Pool/Spa drownings
  • Most residential pool drownings are in kids lt4 yo
  • 3,000 pool drownings require hospital ED
    treatment each year
  • last seen inside the home
  • missing from sight lt5 minutes
  • in the care of one or both parents at the time of
    the drowning
  • gt50 occur in the child's home pool
  • 1/3 occur at homes of friends, neighbors or
    family
  • Since 1980, 230 kids lt4 yrs in spas hot tubs

(Present 1987, Brenner 2001)
14
Cochran Review Pool fencing
  • Meta analysis of casecontrol studies evaluating
    pool fencing
  • Results
  • Pool fencing significantly reduces the risk of
    drowning
  • Odds ratio (OR) for the risk of drowning or near
    drowning in a fenced pool compared to an unfenced
    pool is 0.27 (95 CI 0.16 0.47)
  • Isolation fencing (enclosing pool only) is
    superior to perimeter fencing (enclosing property
    and pool)
  • OR for the risk of drowning in a pool with
    isolation fencing compared to a pool with three
    sided fencing is 0.17 (95 CI 0.07 0.44).
  • In-ground swimming pools without complete 4-sided
    isolation fencing are 60 more likely to be
    involved in drownings than those with 4-sided
    isolation fencing

15
Boat-related drownings
  • 2002 Coast Guard data, all ages
  • 5,705 boating incidents 4,062 injured, 750
    killed
  • 70 of fatalities due to drowning
  • 30 of fatalities due to trauma, hypothermia, CO
    poisoning, or other causes
  • Alcohol was involved in 39 of fatalities
  • Open motor boats - 41
  • Personal watercraft 28

16
Alcohol
  • Involved in 25-50 of teen and adult deaths
    associated with water recreation (Howland 1995
    Howland Hingson 1988)
  • Alcohol influences balance, coordination, and
    judgment, and its effects are heightened by sun
    exposure and heat (Smith and Kraus 1988)
  • Relative risk of drowning was 31.8 in persons
    with a markedly elevated alcohol level (gt21.7
    mmol/L) and 4.6 for levels lt21.6 mmol/L
    (Cummmings JAMA 2812198, 1999)

17
The event, part 1
  • Voluntary breath-holding
  • Aspiration of small amounts into larynx
  • Involuntary laryngospasm
  • Swallow large amounts
  • Laryngospasm abates (due to hypoxia)
  • Aspiration into lungs

18
The event, part 2
  • Decrease in sats
  • Decrease in cardiac output
  • Intense peripheral vasoconstriction
  • Hypothermia
  • Bradycardia
  • Circulatory arrest, while VF rare
  • Extravascular fluid shifts, diuresis

19
Diving reflex
  • Bradycardia, apnea, vasoconstriction
  • Relatively quite weak in humans
  • better in kids
  • Occurs when the face is submerged in very cold
    water (lt20C)
  • Extent of neurologic protection in humans due to
    diving reflex is likely very minimal

20
Pathogenesis 1
  • Asphyxia, hypoxemia, hypercarbia, metabolic
    acidosis
  • Fresh water vs salt water - little difference
    (except for drowning in water with very high
    mineral content, like the Dead Sea)
  • Hypoxemia
  • Occlusion of airways with water particulate
    debris
  • Changes in surfactant activity
  • Bronchospasm
  • Right-to-left shunting increased
  • Physiologic dead space increased

21
Pathogenesis 2
  • Cardiac arrhythmias
  • Hypoxic encephalopathy
  • Renal insufficiency
  • Global brain anoxia potential diffuse cerebral
    edema

22
Findings at autopsy
  • Wet, heavy lungs
  • Varying amounts of hemorrhage and edema
  • Disruption of alveolar walls
  • 70 of victims had aspirated vomitus, sand, mud,
    and aquatic vegetation
  • Cerebral edema and diffuse neuronal injury
  • Acute tubular necrosis

23
Signs symptoms
  • 75 of kids who develop sxs do so within 7 hours
    of event
  • Coma to agitated alertness
  • Cyanosis, coughing, and the production of frothy
    pink sputum
  • Tachypnea, tachycardia
  • Low-grade fever
  • Rales, rhonchi less often wheezes
  • Signs of associated trauma to the head and neck
    should be sought

24
Prevalence of concomitant traumatic injuries
  • 143 drowned near-drowned kids
  • Median age 3.8 years (1 mo 18.7 yrs)
  • 30 with pre-existing disease
  • CHD, sz, MR/CP, DD
  • 5 with traumatic injuries
  • All boys
  • Older, mean age 13.5 years
  • 6 of 7 had C-spine injury from diving

(H Shofer, Ann Emerg Med 2004)
25
Labs tests
  • Very mild electrolyte changes
  • Moderate leukocytosis
  • Hct and Hgb usually normal initally
  • Fresh water aspiration, the Hct may fall slightly
    in the first 24 hrs due to hemolysis
  • Increase in free Hgb without a change in Hct is
    common
  • DIC occasionally
  • ABG metabolic acidosis hypoxemia
  • EKG
  • Sinus tachycardia nonspecific ST-segment and
    T-wave changes
  • Reverts to normal within hours
  • Ominous - ventricular arrhythmias, complete heart
    block
  • CXR
  • May be normal initially despite severe
    respiratory disturbances
  • Patchy infiltrates
  • Pulmonary edema

26
Therapy for the lungs
  • CPAP or PEEP
  • Aerosolized ß-agonists for bronchospasm
  • Bronchoscopy
  • Prophylactic antibiotics have not been shown to
    be beneficial
  • Steroids
  • No controlled human studies to support use
  • Animal models and retrospective studies in humans
    have failed to demonstrate benefit

27
Surfactant
  • Beneficial
  • Porcine surfactant (Curosurf) 0.5 ml/kg (40
    mg/kg) IT for ARDS 8h after freshwater
    near-drowning in a 12yo (Acta Anaesthesiol Scand
    2004)
  • Not beneficial
  • Submerged rabbits
  • (A Anker, Acad Emerg Med 1995)
  • Kids
  • (F Perez-Benavides, Ped Emerg Care 1995)

28
Brain therapy
  • ICP monitoring - not indicated, typically
    irreversible hypoxic cellular injury
  • Brain CT not indicated, unless TBI suspected
  • Mild hyperventilation?
  • Osmotherapy not indicated
  • Corticosteroids (dexamethasone) - no proven
    benefit
  • Seizures - treat aggressively
  • Shivering or random, purposeless movements can
    increase ICP
  • Hypothermia and barbiturate coma - highly
    controversial unlikely to benefit the patient
    (31 comatose kids, J Modell, NEJM 1993)

29
Bad prognostic indicators
  • Submerged gt10 min
  • Time till BLS gt10 min
  • CPR gt25 min
  • Initial GCS lt5
  • Age lt3 years
  • CPR in ER
  • Initial ABG pH lt7.1
  • Initial core temp lt33o

30
Will the child die?
31
Neurologic prognosis
  • Absence of spontaneous respiration is an ominous
    sign associated with severe neurologic sequelae
  • Permanent neurologic sequelae persist in 20 of
    victims who present comatose
  • Minimal brain dysfunction, spastic quadriplegia,
    extrapyramidal syndromes, optic and cerebral
    atrophy, and peripheral neuromuscular damage

32
Cold vs icy water immersion
  • Usually hypothermia is an unfavorable sign
  • Several case reports of dramatic neurologic
    recovery after prolonged (10-150 min) icy water
    submersions
  • Freezing-temperature water (lt5C)
  • Core body temperature less than 28-30C, or much
    lower
  • For hypothermia to be protective, core body
    temperature must fall rapidly, decreasing
    cellular metabolic rate, before significant
    hypoxemia begins

33
Hypothermia easier in kids
  • High BSA/mass ratio and ? subcutaneous fat
    insulation
  • Moderate hypothermia (core 32-35C) ?VO2 due to
    shivering thermogenesis increased sympathetic
    tone
  • Severe hypothermia (core lt32C) shivering stops
    the cellular metabolic rate ? (7/C)

34
Hypothermia brain protection
  • Effective in protecting the brain and other
    organs from anoxia for 75-110 min in controlled
    circumstances where core body temperature is
    cooled first to 18C and then the heart is
    stopped
  • Deep hypothermic circulatory arrest (DHCA)
  • Once cell death from hypoxemia occurs (5-6 min),
    no protective hypothermic effect or improve
    recovery

35
Hypothermia surface cooling
  • Surface cooling alone is cannot ? core temp fast
    enough to yield protection
  • Cooling rate in drowning victims is difficult to
    estimate as patient may also be swallowing or
    breathing in cold water
  • Cardiac anesthesia literature
  • Surface cooling of anesthetized naked infants
    with ice packs and ice cold water decreases
    rectal temperature by 2.5 C in the first 10
    minutes
  • Another 32 minutes for the temperature to fall to
    24-26C
  • During surface cooling in flowing water at 1C
    the nasopharyngeal temperature of a naked infant
    (4 kg) falls 1C every 5 minutes
  • Hypothermic protection involving surface cooling
    only would seem to require submersion in icy (not
    cold) water

36
Does aspiration of icy water will accelerate the
cooling process?
  • 80-90 of animals human submersion victims in
    warm or cold water drownings aspirate very little
    (lt2.2 ml/kg)
  • Theoretically, a very large quantity of icy water
    would have to be aspirated or swallowed
  • Immersion in icy water results in involuntary
    reflex hyperventilation and a decreased breath
    holding ability to lt10 sec, increasing the
    likelihood of aspiration and rebreathing of icy
    water in some victims

37
Ice water submersion - dogs
  • Rapid violent hyperventilation lasts 70 sec
  • Control animals submerged (ice water, head out of
    the water) carotid artery temp fell 0.8C in 2
    min
  • Completely submerged dogs temp fell 8.0C during
    the first 2 min in both ice-water (4C)
  • Rectal temp ? lagged behind ? in carotid temp
  • Victims of ice-water submersions more likely to
    have involuntary breathing aspiration
  • Brain may be cooled to a protective level
    (lt30C) provided the water aspirated was icy
    cardiac output lasts long enough for sufficient
    heat exchange to occur

38
Cold water submersion - humans
  • Few cold water victims have significant brain
    protection
  • Hypothermia is more commonly an unfavorable
    prognostic sign
  • King County, WA (water is cold, but rarely icy)
  • Hypothermic protection has not been observed
  • 92 of good survivors had initial core temp of
    gt34C
  • 61 of those who died or had severe neurologic
    injury had core temp lt34C
  • Finnish study
  • Median water temp 16C
  • Submersion duration lt10 minutes had greatest
    sensitivity in predicting good outcome, even in
    kids

39
Re-warming
  • Re-warm 1-2oC per hour to range 33-36oC
  • Mild (32-35o) passive rewarming
  • Moderate (28-32o)
  • Shivering fails
  • J wave
  • Active internal/external rewarming (not
    extremities)
  • Severe (lt28o)
  • Appears dead, pupils dilated/NR
  • VFib, extreme brady, pulseless
  • Deep rectal or esophageal temps
  • Maintain CPR until core temp gt32o

40
Warm water data - site
  • 274 patients
  • Age 6 months-15 years (mean 32 mos, median 24
    mos)
  • 63 males
  • Submersion witnessed in 12 cases
  • Submersion site data (126 patients)
  • 80 backyard pool or spa
  • 11 in a bathtub
  • 5 in a lake or pond
  • 3 in other sites

41
Warm water data - response
  • Bystander resuscitation 80 patients
  • Average EMS respose time - 6.8 minutes
  • Upon EMS arrival
  • 76 (28) children were in cardiac arrest
  • 13 (5) with PEA
  • Paramedic CPR - 87/89 children
  • 18 (20 of those w/ CPR) no longer needed CPR in
    ED
  • Paramedics intubated 19 children
  • Epinephrine in 30 patients

42
Warm water outcomes
  • Cardiac
  • 71 (80 of those in arrest _at_ scene) arrived to ED
    in cardiac arrest
  • 13 PEA
  • 5 deteriorated required CPR
  • All 89 received Epi - (average duration 8.9
    minutes, range 2 to 105 minutes)
  • 41 (46 of codes) survived (8 intact, 33
    vegetative)
  • Longest CPR duration in an intact survivor was 47
    minutes
  • Respiratory
  • 125 (46) patients were intubated
  • 7 were apneic, 26 were breathing but comatose

43
Warm water outcomes
  • CNS
  • Persistent deficits in 15 of the 185 functionally
    intact survivors
  • Initial ED GCS 3 in 100 kids
  • 14 survived intact
  • 165 patients having GCS 4 upon arrival in the ED
  • 2 survived in PVS
  • all others survived intact
  • 51 patients who subsequently died
  • Withdrawal 22
  • Brain death 23
  • All intact survivors demonstrated functional
    recovery within 48 hours

44
Warm water survival in kids
  • 6 studies reported functional recovery 17
    (overall average) of victims who required CPR in
    the ED
  • Withholding or withdrawal of therapy from kids
    who have low probability of functional survival
    after warm water submersion injury has been
    suggested
  • Failure to respond to advanced life support
    within 25 minutes
  • Lack of purposeful movements or normal brain stem
    function _at_ 24 hrs
  • Anecdotal experience with spectacular recoveries
    the small numbers of severely injured patients
    in most studies raises uncertainty about their
    predictive accuracy
  • Graf et al. suggested that outcome for pediatric
    submersion victims can be predicted with 4
    measures coma, absence of pupillary light
    reflex, admission blood glucose concentration
    (high) and sex

45
Recommendations
  • Pre-hospital resuscitation, including early
    intubation, ventilation, vascular access, and
    administration of advanced life support
    medications
  • Continued resuscitation and stabilization in the
    ED
  • Full supportive care in the ICU for a minimum of
    48 hrs
  • Consider withdrawal of support if no neurologic
    improvement is detected after 48 hours
  • Ancillary testing such as brainstem evoked
    responses, EEG, and MRI (not CT) may prove
    helpful to corroborate the neurologic examination

Pediatrics, 1997 Christenson, Jansen, Perkins
46
You cant make this stuff up
  • 67 year old with pulmonary fibrosis
  • S/P lung resection
  • On ward, with O2
  • POD2 developed distress, to ICU, intubated,
    ARDS
  • Finally extubates
  • (CHEST 2001 1201021-1022)

47
Part deaux a better history
  • Day after extubation, RN noticed patient's friend
    attempting to submerge the patient's face in a
    water-filled basin
  • On questioning, patient indicated that he was
    aspirating water to clean sinuses and lungs,
    explaining that this was a daily routine for
    cleaning airways in his family
  • He noted that on POD 1, while performing this
    ritual, he had a severe coughing and choking
    spell while his face was submerged
  • This "technique" was witnessed by the housestaff,
    but not reported until directly questioned

48
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