Columbia Anti Shivering Protocol
Columbia Anti Shivering Protocol
Columbia Anti Shivering Protocol
DOI 10.1007/s12028-010-9474-7
ORIGINAL ARTICLE
Abstract
Background As the practice of aggressive temperature
control has become more commonplace, new clinical
problems are arising, of which shivering is the most common. Treatment for shivering while avoiding the negative
consequences of many anti-shivering therapies is often
difficult. We have developed a stepwise protocol that
emphasizes use of the least sedating regimen to achieve
adequate shiver control.
Methods All patients treated with temperature modulating devices in the neurological intensive care unit were
prospectively entered into a database. Baseline demographic information, daily temperature goals, best daily
GCS, and type and cumulative dose of anti-shivering
agents were recorded.
Results We collected 213 patients who underwent 1388
patient days of temperature modulation. Eighty-nine
patients underwent hypothermia and 124 patients underwent induced normothermia. In 18% of patients and 33%
of the total patient days only none-sedating baseline
interventions were needed. The first agent used was most
commonly dexmeditomidine at 50% of the time, followed
H. A. Choi S.-B. Ko L. Fernandez A. M. Carpenter
E. Gilmore R. Malhotra S. A. Mayer K. Lee J. Claassen
J. M. Schmidt N. Badjatia (&)
The Neurological Institute of New York, Columbia University
College of Physicians and Surgeons, New York, NY, USA
e-mail: nb2217@columbia.edu
M. Presciutti
Department of Nursing, New York Presbyterian Hospital,
New York, NY, USA
C. Lesch
Department of Pharmacy, New York Presbyterian Hospital,
New York, NY, USA
Introduction
Over the past several years, there has been an increasing
use of advanced temperature modulating devices to achieve
both therapeutic hypothermia and normothermia as a
treatment for out of hospital cardiac arrest, refractory fever
in the acutely brain injured patient, and raised intracranial
pressure. Each device works by promoting conductive heat
loss either by surface or intravascular cooling and maintains a tightly regulated temperature (0.1C) thru a
feedback mechanism linked to a continuous core body
temperature measurement.
These technological advances have made it feasible to
achieve and maintain normothermia and hypothermia for a
prolonged period. As the practice of aggressive fever control
with these devices becomes more commonplace, new,
unanticipated clinical problems are arising, of which shivering is the most common [1]. The shivering response is part
of the centrally mediated thermoregulatory defense mechanism that can have a significant detrimental impact on
systemic oxygen consumption, brain tissue oxygenation, and
intracranial pressure. The overall metabolic consequences
Neurocrit Care
Methods
Patient Selection and Data Collection
Beginning in January 2006, all patients treated with a temperature modulating device in our Neurological Intensive
Care Unit (NICU) have been prospectively entered into our
therapeutic temperature modulating (TTM) database. Baseline data collection includes demographics, as well as
admission clinical and laboratory data. Once TTM is initiated,
data collection includes daily temperature goal, minimum and
maximum temperature best GCS score, routine daily chemistries, a tabulated SIRS score, type and cumulative dose of
each vasoactive and sedative infusion. Scoring of infectious
complications using standard criteria for pneumonia, urinary
tract infection, meningitis/ventriculitis, bloodstream infection, and Clostridium difficile infection as well as antibiotic
use are recorded daily. Each patient is also linked to a high
resolution data acquisition system (BedmasterEX, Excel
Medical Electronics, Jupiter, FL) to acquire digital data every
5 s from General Electric (GE) Solar 8000i monitors. The
conduct of this study has been approved by the Columbia
University Institutional Review Board.
Therapeutic Temperature Modulation
Decisions regarding method and duration of cooling are at
the discretion of the attending neurointensivist (NB, JC,
KL, SM). Established indications for TTM at our
Table 1 The Columbia
Anti-Shivering Protocol
Step
0
institution include: cardiac arrest, raised intracranial pressure, and refractory fever in the setting of acute brain
injury. Target temperatures for normothermia are between
36 and 37C; target temperatures for hypothermia range
between 33 and 35.5C. TTM is performed with either
intravascular cooling methods (Celsius Control System,
Innercool Therapies, Inc, San Diego, CA; Cool Guard, Zoll
Therapeutics, San Francisco, CA) or external cooling
(Arctic Sun Cooling System; Medivance Inc, Louisville,
Colo). Each device is regulated to a core body temperature
measured either by a bladder thermistor (Bardex; C. R.
Bard Inc, Covington, GA) or esophageal temperature probe
(Lifesound, Novamed, Elmsford, NY).
Anti-Shivering Algorithm
During the cooling period, shivering is scored hourly using
the Bedside Shivering Assessment Scale by the NICU
nursing staff. The goal for each patient undergoing TTM
was to achieve no to minimal shivering, as defined by the
BSAS score B1. Our stepwise protocol for shivering control is shown in Table 1. At baseline (Step 0), we initiate a
series of interventions prior to the initiation of cooling
designed to minimize shivering during the induction phase.
These measures are then continued empirically throughout
the entire cooling period. The initial intervention (Step 1)
of either an opiate or dexmedetomidine is made for any
patient demonstrating moderate to severe shivering (BSAS
score 23) despite all baseline interventions. The choice
between which agent to use first is based upon additional
needs for the particular patient. For example, opiates are
considered first in patients with either poorly controlled
pain or baseline bradycardia, and likewise, dexmedetomidine in patients with poorly controlled agitation. If the
initial intervention is not successful the next step is the
combination of dexmedetomidine and an opiate (Step 2).
The goal for both steps 1 and 2 of the protocol is to
maximize the use of one agent prior to proceeding to the
second agent; therefore patients graduating between Steps
Intervention
Baseline
Mild sedation
Dose
Acetaminophen
6501000 mg Q 46 h
Buspirone
30 mg Q 8 h
Magnesium sulfate
Skin counterwarming
43C/MAX Temp
Dexmedetomidine
0.21.5 mcg/kg/h
or
Opioid
Meperidine 50100 mg IM or IV
2
3
Moderate sedation
Deep sedation
Doses as above
5075 mcg/kg/min
Neuromuscular blockade
Vecuronium
0.1 mg/kg IV
Neurocrit Care
24 (11)
Statistical Analysis
189 (89)
Hypothermia (patients)
89 (42)
289 (20)
1099 (80)
Results
Data was collected for 213 patients who underwent 1388
patient days of TTM therapy from January 2006 to March
2010. Eighty-nine patients were started on hypothermia
therapy, accounted for 871 TTM patient-days in total,
517 days of which were hypothermia days. Hundred and
twenty-four patients were started on normothermia,
accounting for 848 TTM patient days of normothermia.
Patients started on hypothermia who were transitioned
to normothermia contributed another 251 patient days
accounting for a total of 1099 normothermia days.
The mean age was 59 (SD 17), mean BMI was 28 kg/m2
(SD 6.5), mean BSA was 1.9 m2 (SD 0.3). 47% were men.
The median daily best GCS was 7 (IQR 510). 35% of
patients were diagnosed with subarachnoid hemorrhage;
intracerebral hemorrhage and cardiac arrest diagnosis were
of equal prevalence at 23%; 13% had ischemic strokes and
7% had traumatic brain injury (Table 3).
Analysis of all patients showed that in 18% of patients
and 33% of the total number of patient days, no additional
anti-shivering medications besides those in Step 0 were
used. Beyond the Step 0 medications, 29% of patients
received one agent, 35% received two agents, 15%
59 17
Male (N, %)
100 (47)
28 6.5
1.9 0.3
7 (510)
Subarachnoid hemorrhage
75 (35)
Cardiac arrest
48 (23)
Intracerebral hemorrhage
48 (23)
Stroke (N, %)
27 (13)
15 (7)
Hypothermia
Normothermia
Interventions N (%)
Interventions N (%)
Interventions N (%)
0
1
39 (18) 0
61 (29) 1
22 (25) 0
23 (26) 1
17 (14)
38 (31)
74 (35) 2
28 (31) 2
46 (37)
34 (15) 3
12 (13) 3
22 (18)
5 (2.4) 4
4 (4.5) 4
1 (1)
Total
213
89
124
Total
Total
Neurocrit Care
Table 4 Daily number
of interventions characterized
by medication
Interventions
Days (N, %)
Dexmed (%)
Opioids (%)
Propofol (%)
Paralytics (%)
TTM
0
453 (33)
470 (34)
50
36
5.1
364 (26)
71
84
29
17
96 (6.9)
90
92
83
34
5 (0.36)
100
100
100
100
Total
1388
Hypothermia
0
103 (36)
84 (29)
36
38
12
14
72 (25)
57
69
31
43
29 (10)
26
90
83
56
1 (0.4)
100
100
100
100
Total
289
Normothermia
0
350 (32)
386 (35)
53
36
292 (27)
74
87
28
10
67 (6)
97
94
84
25
4 (0.4)
100
100
100
100
Total
1099
Discussion
2
Age
OR
95%CI
P value
-0.18
0.83
0.760.92
<0.001
2.1
1.52.9
<0.001
Male
0.36
BSA
-0.75
0.47
0.240.92
0.028
GCS
Age
0.08
-0.40
1.1
0.67
1.01.1
0.600.74
<0.001
<0.001
2.7
1.84.0
<0.001
0.12
0.060.27
<0.001
0.951.1
0.85
0.63
0.540.74
<0.001
<0.001
Male
0.50
BSA
-0.75
GCS
0.01
Age
-0.46
Male
4.6
2.58.6
BSA
-1.5
0.76
0.23
0.070.75
0.015
GCS
-0.05
0.96
0.881.0
0.291
Age
-0.63
0.54
0.320.89
0.017
1.0177
0.048
0.5 (0.31)
0.43 (0.180.69)
Meperidine (mg/24 h)
125 (55250)
Male
1.3
Fentanyl (mcg/h)
47 (2483)
BSA
-2.7
0.07
07.1
0.256
Propofol (mg/h)
101 (42186)
GCS
-0.03
0.97
0.701.3
0.869
Vecuronium (mg/24 h)
13 (1020)
13
Neurocrit Care
Neurocrit Care
References
1. Badjatia N. Hyperthermia and fever control in brain injury. Crit
Care Med. 2009;37:S2507.
2. Badjatia N, Strongilis E, Gordon E, et al. Metabolic impact of
shivering during therapeutic temperature modulation: the Bedside
Shivering Assessment Scale. Stroke. 2008;39:32427.
3. Badjatia N, Strongilis E, Prescutti M, et al. Metabolic benefits of
surface counter warming during therapeutic temperature modulation. Crit Care Med. 2009;37:18937.
4. Oddo M, Frangos S, Maloney-Wilensky E, Andrew Kofke W, Le
Roux PD, Levine JM. Effect of shivering on brain tissue oxygenation during induced normothermia in patients with severe
brain injury. Neurocrit Care. 2010;12:106.
5. Kimberger O, Ali SZ, Markstaller M, et al. Meperidine and skin
surface warming additively reduce the shivering threshold: a
volunteer study. Crit Care. 2007;11:R29.
6. Lennon RL, Hosking MP, Conover MA, Perkins WJ. Evaluation
of a forced-air system for warming hypothermic postoperative
patients. Anesth Analg. 1990;70:4247.