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Near-Drowning

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Definition & Pathophysiology - Drowning Depths

  • Definition (WHO): Respiratory impairment from submersion/immersion in liquid.
    • 'Near-drowning' obsolete; use 'drowning' with outcome (fatal/non-fatal).
  • Epidemiology: Highest risk in toddlers (1-4 yrs) and adolescent males.
  • Pathophysiology:
    • Primary Insult: Hypoxia.
    • Laryngospasm ('dry'): ~10-15%; glottic closure, no initial aspiration.
    • Aspiration ('wet'): ~85-90%; fluid in lungs.
    • Water Type:
      • Freshwater (hypotonic): Surfactant washout $\rightarrow$ atelectasis.
      • Saltwater (hypertonic): Alveolar fluid influx $\rightarrow$ edema.
      • Hypoxia is the dominant factor regardless of water type.
    • Systemic: CNS (HIBI), CVS (arrhythmias), Resp (ARDS), Renal (ATN), metabolic acidosis.

Fresh vs Saltwater Drowning Effects on Lungs

⭐ The most significant consequence of drowning is hypoxic brain injury (HIBI), determining long-term outcome.

Clinical Features & Assessment - Gasping Signs

  • Spectrum: Asymptomatic to cardiorespiratory arrest.
  • Respiratory: Cough, dyspnea, tachypnea, cyanosis. Crackles, wheezes, apnea.
  • Neurological: Altered sensorium (GCS), seizures. Assess for Hypoxic Ischemic Brain Injury (HIBI).
  • Cardiovascular: Tachycardia/bradycardia, hypotension, arrhythmias.
  • Hypothermia: Common, especially in children.
  • Associated injuries: Head/cervical spine trauma (diving).
  • Initial Assessment: ABCDE approach.
    • Key history: Duration of submersion, water temp, type of water, bystander CPR. ABCDE Assessment Steps and Criteria

⭐ Patients asymptomatic with normal oxygen saturation and lung sounds for 6-8 hours of observation are unlikely to develop significant respiratory complications.

Management - Rescue & Revive Protocol

  • Pre-hospital:

    • Safe rescue from water.
    • Immediate CPR: Compressions + Breaths.
    • C-spine immobilization prn (if trauma suspected).
    • Remove wet clothes, prevent heat loss.
  • ED & ICU Management:

    • Oxygenation & Ventilation:
      • Initiate high-flow O2. Consider CPAP/BiPAP for respiratory distress.
      • For ARDS: Intubation & Lung Protective Ventilation (low tidal volume, optimal PEEP). PEEP is crucial.
    • Circulation:
      • Cautious IV fluid resuscitation, guided by clinical assessment.
      • Vasopressors for persistent hypotension.
    • Hypothermia:
      • Gradual rewarming to normothermia.
      • Consider therapeutic hypothermia (32-36°C) for neuroprotection if post-cardiac arrest (note: evidence in drowning is limited).
    • Monitoring:
      • Continuous: cardiac rhythm, SpO2, ETCO2, core temperature.
      • Serial: neuro status, ABG, electrolytes, lactate.
    • Avoid:
      • NO routine prophylactic antibiotics.
      • NO routine steroids. Surfactant not routinely recommended.

Pediatric Submersion Injuries Clinical Pathway

⭐ Early and effective bystander CPR is one of the most important factors improving outcomes in pediatric drowning.

Prognosis & Complications - After the Splash

  • Poor Prognostic Factors:
    • Submersion duration >5-10 minutes.
    • Time to effective BLS/ALS >10 minutes.
    • Severe hypothermia on admission (unless rapid cooling, preserved circulation).
    • Persistent apnea, CPR needed in ED.
    • Glasgow Coma Scale (GCS) ≤5 on presentation.
    • Severe metabolic acidosis (arterial pH <7.0-7.1).
    • Fixed and dilated pupils.
  • Complications:
    • Acute Respiratory Distress Syndrome (ARDS).
    • Hypoxic-Ischemic Brain Injury (HIBI): cerebral edema, seizures, long-term neurological deficits.
    • Aspiration pneumonia.
    • Multiple Organ Dysfunction Syndrome (MODS).
    • Electrolyte imbalances (rarely severe).

⭐ The neurological status of the child after resuscitation is the most critical determinant of long-term prognosis.

High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways

  • Hypoxia is the central pathophysiological event, leading to multi-organ dysfunction.
  • Pulmonary complications (ARDS, surfactant inactivation, aspiration pneumonitis) are critical.
  • Neurological outcome (cerebral hypoxia/edema) is the primary determinant of long-term morbidity.
  • Immediate bystander CPR and early advanced airway management are crucial for survival.
  • Manage hypothermia aggressively; core rewarming for temperatures <32°C.
  • Prophylactic antibiotics and corticosteroids are not routinely indicated post-submersion.

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