1 / 15

Adventure Race Medicine

Adventure Race Medicine. Devika Raj. What is Adventure Racing?. Aka ‘wilderness multi-sport endurance race’ Prolonged, competitive, multi-disciplinary sport in ardous terrain Running, trekking, kayaking, climbing, mountain biking, caving etc.

marisa
Download Presentation

Adventure Race Medicine

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Adventure Race Medicine Devika Raj

  2. What is Adventure Racing? • Aka ‘wilderness multi-sport endurance race’ • Prolonged, competitive, multi-disciplinary sport in ardous terrain • Running, trekking, kayaking, climbing, mountain biking, caving etc. • Often >36hrs necessitating decisions regarding pace, sleep, navigation etc.

  3. Pre-race Health • Injury and ill health is more common in athletes with previous injury • Inadequate recovery between injury/races  increased risk of illness • ‘Over-reaching’ and ‘over-training’  decreased performance, altered immune function and mood changes

  4. Types of Illness and Injury • Emotional complications [mood, stress, sleep] • Musculoskeletal • Soft tissue [blisters, open wounds, infections] • Respiratory [SOB, respiratory distress etc.] • Cardiovascular [hypotension, tachycardia, secondary dysarrhythmia] • Temperature dysregulation [hypo/hyper-thermia] • Dehydration [hyponatremia, hypotension] • GI complications [infected water, dehydration]

  5. Sleep Deprivation • Consequence of adventure racing • ‘post-race blues’ (depression, anger, confusion) most common around the 3rd day of recovery • Mood changes, immune suppression, impaired thermoregulation are common consequences • Severe fatigue can be a catalyst to infectious mononucleosis

  6. Soft-Tissue Injuries • Blisters are easily prevented by comfortable footwear and dry feet • Blister tape and petroleum jelly are easy solutions • Open skin wounds should be cleansed and covered to prevent injury • Prophylactic antibiotics are advised if the wound is exposed/deep

  7. Musculoskeletal Injuries • Stress fracture: crescendo pain, shaft of metatarsal, pain on pressure/weight baring • Runner’s knee: pain in kneecap on running/extending leg • Muscle pulls/tears  rest • P-protect; R-rest; I-ice; C-compress; E-elevate; S-stabilize

  8. Respiratory Complications • Mucosal immune system protects body from URTI’s negatively affected by exercise and stress • Reactive airway disease and exercise induced bronchospasm is common • Decline in FEV1 and FVC • Treatment: Oxygen, B2 agonist, adrenaline, fluids, hospital

  9. Cardiovascular Complications • Well trained competitors are in some cases able to sustain a relative maximum oxygen consumptions [VO2 max] • respiratory distress along with complications of dehydration, hyperthermia, hypothermia and hypovolemia can cause cardiac complications such as dysarrhythmia’s treat cause

  10. Hypothermia • Symptoms include confusion, dizziness, chills, mood changes, slurred speech, ataxia, cardiac arrest • Treat by preventing further heat loss, avoid VF • If severe: Bretylium (5mg/kg) • Heat packs in the axillae/groin

  11. Dehydration and Hyponatremia • Pre-race fluid replaces lost body water, reduces heat storage capacity, maintains serum osmolality, and maintains blood glucose • Fluids w/ carbohydrates = ideal for events >90mins • Hyponatremia disorientation, nausea, headache, muscle cramps, chills, seizures  isotonic saline

  12. Rhabdomyolysis • Injury to skeletal muscle causing leakage of toxic intracellular contents into plasma • Exercise associated hyponatremia (EAH) often presents simultaneously • Treatment for hypervolemichyponatremia=free water restriction • Treatment for rhabdomyolysis is aggressive IV isotonic fluid administration • Important to balance aggressive fluid resuscitation with mindful fluid restriction

  13. Hyperthermia/Heat Stroke • Heat exhaustion is characterized by worsening symptoms of weakness, dizziness, mental confusion and dehydration • Heat stroke is when the body loses its ability to sweat due to profound dehydration, and body temperature continues to rise, above 40 degrees • Remove restrictive clothing, spray body with water, cover with ice-water soaked sheets, place cooling packs in axillae and groin

  14. Preparation and Risk Reduction • Skin and soft tissue injuriesbandages, topical antiseptic, blister tape etc. • Be prepared for hypothermia, water aspiration, drowning/near drowning, cardiovascular arrest, minor abrasions/contusions, hypothermia, nausea/vomiting, and minor trauma • Monitor weather, water temperatures and conditions prior to and during event • Enforce safety measures and advise competitors about healthy racing

  15. Resources • Mood, Illness and Injury Responses and Recovery with Adventure Racing- Nat Anglem, MBChB, FACSP; Samuel J.E. Lucas, BPhED (Hons), BSc; Elaine A. Rose, PhD; James D. Cotter, PhD • EVENT MEDICINE: INJURY AND ILLNESS DURING AN EXPEDITION-LENGTH ADVENTURE RACE- David A. Townes, MD, MPH, FACEP,* Timothy S. Talbot, MD,† Ian S. Wedmore, MD, FACEP,‡ and Robert Billingsly, MD† • Pattern of Injury and Illness During Expedition-Length Adventure Races- Kyle A. McLaughlin, MD; David A. Townes, MD, MPH, FACEP; Ian S. Wedmore, MD; Robert T. Billingsley, MD; Chad D. Listrom, MD; Leslie D. Iverson, ARNP, MPH • Injury and illness in a wilderness multisport endurance event -MEREDITH L. BORLAND, MBBS, FRACGP, and IAN R. ROGERS*, MBBS, FACEM • Pre-race health status and medical events during the 2005 World Adventure Racing ChampionshipsRichard J. Newsham-West a,c,∗, Joanne Marley a, Anthony G. Schneiders a, Andrew Gray b • Rhabdomyolysis and Hyponatremia: A Cluster of Five Cases at the 161-km 2009 Western States Endurance RunJessica Rose Bruso, DO; Martin D. Hoffman, MD; Ian R. Rogers, MBBS; Linda Lee, MS, FNP; Gary Towle, MD; Tamara Hew-Butler, DPM, PhD • Heart Rate, Mean Arterial Blood Pressure, and Pulmonary Function Changes Associated With an UltraenduranceTriathlonErik L. O. Seedhouse, PhD; Michael L. Walsh, PhD; Andrew P. Blaber, PhD

More Related