A Rare Case of a Patient Being Alert and Communicative Despite Severe Hypothermia
Emile Jeunesse, Patrick O'Malley, Nick Petrus, Chelsea McCoy

TL;DR
A 58-year-old man remained alert and communicative despite having a core body temperature of 25.1°C, which is typically associated with severe hypothermia.
Contribution
This case presents a rare instance where clinical signs of mild hypothermia occurred alongside a core temperature indicating severe hypothermia.
Findings
The patient showed mild hypothermia symptoms despite a core temperature of 25.1°C, indicating severe hypothermia.
The patient was successfully treated with rewarming techniques and remained neurologically stable.
The case highlights the importance of using core body temperature measurements for diagnosing hypothermia.
Abstract
Hypothermia is defined as a significant drop in core body temperature below 35°C (95°F). It is traditionally staged as mild, moderate, severe, and profound at temperatures of 35°C to 32°C (95°F to 89.6°F), 32°C to 28°C (89.6°F to 82.4°F), <28°C (<82.4°F), and <24°C (75.2°F), respectively. It can also be classified into the same stages by clinical presentations. We present a patient that fits into two different stages based on core body temperature and clinical presentation. A 58-year-old homeless male with a history of seizures and alcohol use presented via emergency medical services after spending the night outside and uncovered with a core body temperature of 25.1°C (77.1°F) via a urinary bladder thermometer, meeting criteria for severe, near profound, hypothermia. However, he was alert and communicating, shivering, with tachycardia, tachypnea, normal oxygen saturation, and elevated…
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Taxonomy
TopicsThermal Regulation in Medicine · Thermoregulation and physiological responses · Cardiac Arrest and Resuscitation
