Hyperthermia

Background

  • Hyperthermia is an elevation in core body temperature due to failure of thermoregulation (distinct from fever, which is a regulated increase mediated by pyrogens)
  • Core temperature >40°C (104°F) is generally considered severe hyperthermia
  • The key distinction is: fever = hypothalamic set-point is raised (treat infection); hyperthermia = heat gain exceeds heat loss (active cooling required)
  • Antipyretics (acetaminophen, NSAIDs) are ineffective in true hyperthermia because the thermoregulatory set-point is normal

Differential Diagnosis

<translate>

Fever

Infectious


Non-infectious

</translate>

Toxicologic causes of Hyperthermia

Endocrine causes of Hyperthermia

Neurologic causes of Hyperthermia

Evaluation

  • Core temperature (rectal or esophageal preferred; oral/temporal may underestimate)
  • CBC, BMP, LFTs, coagulation studies, CK, lactate, urinalysis
  • Consider blood cultures, LP, CXR if infectious cause not excluded
  • Toxicology screen if ingestion or drug-related cause suspected
  • Consider CT head if altered mental status

Management

Disposition

  • Admit all patients with heat stroke, malignant hyperthermia, NMS, or serotonin syndrome
  • ICU for altered mental status, organ dysfunction, or temperature >41°C (105.8°F)
  • Mild heat-related illness (heat exhaustion, heat cramps) may be discharged after treatment with adequate follow-up

See Also

References