pathophysiology of frostbite
Last reviewed 02/2021
pathophysiology of frostbite
Injury caused by the freezing of tissue can be divided into 4 overlapping pathological pahses:
- prefreeze
- presence of tissue cooling with accompanying vasoconstriction and ischaemia
- does not involve actual ice crystal formation
- there is hyperesthesia and paresthesia due to neuronal cooling and ischaemia
- freeze-thaw phase
- formation of ice crystals intracellularly (during a more rapid-onset freezing injury) or extracellularly (during a slower freeze)
- results in protein and lipid derangement, cellular electrolyte shifts, cellular dehydration, cell membrane lysis, and cell death
- thawing process may initiate ischemia-reperfusion injury and the inflammatory
response
- vascular stasis phase
- vessels may fluctuate between constriction and dilation
- blood may leak from vessels or coagulate within them
- late ischaemic phase
- caused by progressive tissue ischemia and infarction from a cascade of event e.g. - inflammation mediated by thromboxane A2, prostaglandin F2α, bradykinins, and histamine; intermittent vasoconstriction of arterioles and venules; continued reperfusion injury; showers of emboli coursing through the microvessels; and thrombus formation in larger vessels
- cell death is caused by destruction of the microcirculation
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