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Heat Related Emergencies

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mid August, 30 C with Humidex feels like 40 C ... Anhidrosis. Acute renal failure. Oliguria. cooling immediately is key to survival ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Heat Related Emergencies


1
Heat Related Emergencies
  • Mike McDonnell, MD

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 gt75

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 lt 39ºC
  • ice packs/cooling blankets less effective

19
Complications
  • aspiration and seizures are common
  • airway control
  • tachyarrhythmias are common
  • usually resolve with cooling
  • dont over hydrate (IV fluids) pulmonary edema
  • agitation benzodiazepines
  • shivering chlorpromazine, Demerol?
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