Trauma: Frostbite
Frostbite
Basics
- Both Freezing and Reperfusion Contribute to Injury
- 90% of Injuries Occur in the Hands & Feet from Ages 30-49
Stages
- Frostnip
- Formation of Ice Crystals on the Skin Surface
- Intense Pain with Vasoconstriction, Numbness & Pallor
- No Long-Term Damage
- First-Degree
- Superficial Skin
- White-Yellow Plaque, No Blister
- Second-Degree
- Superficial Clear-Milky Blisters
- Third-Degree
- Deeper Hemorrhagic Blisters
- Fourth-Degree
- Damage to the Deep Subcutaneous Tissue
- Skin Becomes Black & Mummified
First Degree Frostbite 1
Frostbite Blisters: Left Clear & Right Hemorrhagic 2
Fourth Degree Frostbite 3
Treatment
- Initial Tx: Rapid Rewarming in Circulating Water
- Blister Management:
- Non-Hemorrhagic:
- Does Not Interfere with Movement: Nothing
- Interferes with Movement/Joints: Aspirate or Debride (Controversial)
- Hemorrhagic: Nothing
- Non-Hemorrhagic:
- Avoid Early Debridement/Amputation
- Demarcates Over Weeks-Months
- May Require Earlier Debridement if Wet-Gangrene or Sepsis Develop
- Other Considerations:
- Consider tPA for Grade 3-4 Injuries if < 24 Hours
- Consider Prostacyclin (Iloprost) for Grade 2-4 Injuries if < 48-72 Hours
- Vasodilator May Improve Perfusion
Thrombolysis
- Limits Microvascular Thrombosis of Reperfusion
- Indication: Cyanosis Persisting Proximal to the Distal Phalanx (Grade 3-4) & Demonstrated Loss of Perfusion at or Proximal to the Middle Phalanx Immediately After Rewarming
- *Loss of Perfusion Demonstrated by CTA or Bone Scan (Technetium-99m Scintigraphy)
- Contraindications:
- > 6-24 Hours Since Onset
- Multiple Freeze/Thaw Cycles
- Any Other General Thrombolytic Contraindications
- Doing:
- Bolus 0.15 mg/kg Followed by 0.15 mg/kg/hr Infusion for 6 Hours (100 mg Maximum)
- Then Give Therapeutic Anticoagulation (Lovenox 1 mg/kg BID) for 14 Days
- May Consider Catheter-Directed Intra-Arterial Thrombolysis if Available
Frostbite Bone Scan: No Perfusion in Left Digits 3-4 & Right 4-5, Small Uptake in Others 4
References
- Sever C, Kulahci Y, Acar A, Duman H. Frostbite injury of hand caused by liquid helium: a case report. Eplasty. 2010 May 19;10:e35. (License: CC BY-2.0)
- Gonzaga T, Jenabzadeh K, Anderson CP, Mohr WJ, Endorf FW, Ahrenholz DH. Use of Intra-arterial Thrombolytic Therapy for Acute Treatment of Frostbite in 62 Patients with Review of Thrombolytic Therapy in Frostbite. J Burn Care Res. 2016 Jul-Aug;37(4):e323-34. (License: CC BY-NC-ND-4.0)
- Ramdass MJ. Grade IV frostbite requiring bilateral below knee amputations: a case report. Cases J. 2009 Apr 8;2:6635. (License: CC BY-3.0)
- Gross EA, Moore JC. Using thrombolytics in frostbite injury. J Emerg Trauma Shock. 2012 Jul;5(3):267-71. (License: CC BY-NC-SA-3.0)