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Heat Related Emergencies

Mike McDonnell, MD. Heat Related Emergencies. Scenario. HUSAR team gets deployed to the collapse of an office tower in downtown Toronto people are trapped mid August, 30ºC with Humidex feels like 40ºC team member complains of cramps, stops working and drinks, goes back to work

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Heat Related Emergencies

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  1. Mike McDonnell, MD Heat Related Emergencies

  2. Scenario • HUSAR team gets deployed to the collapse of an office tower in downtown Toronto • people are trapped • mid August, 30ºC with Humidex feels like 40ºC • team member complains of cramps, stops working and drinks, goes back to work • later found sitting in corner, staring, mumbling about “mummy”

  3. Objectives • physiology of heat transfer/cooling • heat related illnesses • types • Treatment • “on the pile” vs. “in the pile”

  4. Physiology of Heat Transfer • “Supply” and “Demand” relationship • “Supply” (heat production) • BMR • without cooling, temperature increases 1.1ºC/hr • Increases up to 20X with strenuous exercise

  5. Supply and Demand • “Demand” (heat loss) • Conduction • warm body to cooler surroundings (2%) • Convection • heat loss to air and water • better with loose clothing, higher wind velocity • Radiation • electromagnetic waves • great in cool temperatures, net gain when warm • Evaporation • conversion of liquid to gas • major factor – non-acclimatized – sweat 1 litre/hour • not effective when relative humidity >75%

  6. Physiology of cooling We are like a water cooled car....

  7. Heat Related Illnesses • Spectrum • Not so bad, bad, very bad

  8. Not so bad • “Prickly Heat” • obstruction of the sweat gland pores, produces vesicles, sometimes ruptures, very itchy • can get superinfected/rupture • treated with chlorhexidine, antibiotic creams, loose clothing preventative

  9. Not so bad • Heat edema • nonacclimatized individuals • standing for long periods of time • affects feet and ankles • treated with leg elevation

  10. Not so bad • Heat Cramps • brief, intermittent, severe cramps in working muscles • early on in work in hot environment • heavy sweaters with hypotonic fluid replacement more at risk • usually after exertion • treatment • Rapid elevation of salt solutions: ½ tsp salt in quart of water, commercially available solutions taste better

  11. Bad • Heat Syncope • vasodilation and venous pooling from standing • reduced circulating blood volume • volume loss makes it worse • elderly are more susceptible • treatment – fix causes/injuries

  12. Bad • Heat Exhaustion • volume depletion under heat stress • two types: water and salt depletion • water: inadequate fluid replacement • salt: hypotonic fluid replacement

  13. Heat Exhaustion • Signs and Symptoms • vague malaise, fatigue, headache    • core temperature often normal; if elevated, less than 40° C (104° F)    • mental function essentially intact; no coma or seizures    • tachycardia, orthostatic hypotension, clinical dehydration (may occur)    • other major illness ruled out    • if in doubt, treat as heat stroke

  14. Heat Exhaustion - Treatment • rest    • cool environment    • assess volume status    • fluid replacement: normal saline to replete volume if patient orthostatic, replace free water deficits slowly to avoid cerebral edema

  15. Very Bad • Heat Stroke • Hallmark: alteration in level of consciousness • thermoregulation is overwhelmed and fails • may be a prodrome, may be like heat exhaustion • rapid treatment is essential

  16. Heat Stroke • Diagnosis • exposure to heat stress • signs of severe CNS dysfunction (coma, seizures, delirium)    • core temperature usually above 40.5° C (105° F), but may be lower    • dry, hot skin common, but sweating may persist   

  17. Types • Classic and exertional

  18. Treatment • cooling immediately is key to survival • use all methods of heat transfer • spraying atomized cool water (evaporation) combined with fans (convection) very effective • ice water immersion can be attempted • rapid but take out when body temp < 39ºC • ice packs/cooling blankets less effective

  19. Complications • aspiration and seizures are common • airway control • tachyarrhythmias are common • usually resolve with cooling • don’t over hydrate (IV fluids) – pulmonary edema • agitation – benzodiazepines • shivering – chlorpromazine, Demerol?

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