Editorial
Cooling after cardiac arrest—the longer the better?
Abstract
Temperature plays a key role in the development of acute neurological injuries. Numerous animal experiments have convincingly demonstrated that temperature elevation (either spontaneous/infection related or induced by external warming) can significantly exacerbate all types of neurologic injury; in fact, the magnitude of fever-induced increase in injury is similar to the effects of severe hypoperfusion or severe hypoxia (1-4).