Effect of Head and Face Insulation on Cooling Rate During Snow Burial

被引:5
作者
McIntosh, Scott E. [1 ]
Crouch, Andre K. [2 ]
Dorais, Andrew [2 ]
McDevitt, Marion [1 ]
Wilson, Courtney [3 ]
Harmston, Chris H. [4 ]
Radwin, Marty I. [5 ]
Grissom, Colin K. [6 ,7 ]
机构
[1] Univ Utah Hlth Care, Div Emergency Med, Salt Lake City, UT 84132 USA
[2] Intermt Med Ctr, Dept Emergency Med, Murray, UT USA
[3] Rogue Reg Med Ctr, Dept Emergency Med, Medford, OR USA
[4] Nexus Orthopaed LLC, Salt Lake City, UT USA
[5] Granger Med Clin, Salt Lake City, UT USA
[6] Univ Utah, Shock Trauma ICU, Intermt Med Ctr, Murray, UT USA
[7] Univ Utah, Dept Med, Murray, UT USA
关键词
avalanche; snow burial; hypothermia; AVALANCHE FATALITIES; TEMPERATURE; HYPOTHERMIA; DEATH; TRAUMA; WATER;
D O I
10.1016/j.wem.2014.07.003
中图分类号
R1 [预防医学、卫生学];
学科分类号
1004 ; 120402 ;
摘要
Objectives.-Avalanche victims are subjected to a number of physiological stressors during burial. We simulated avalanche burial to monitor physiological data and determine whether wearing head and face insulation slows cooling rate during snow burial. In addition, we sought to compare 3 different types of temperature measurement methods. Methods.-Nine subjects underwent 2 burials each, 1 with head and face insulation and I without. Burials consisted of a 60-minute burial phase followed by a 60-minute rewarming phase. Temperature was measured via 3 methods: esophageal probe, ingestible capsule, and rectal probe. Results.-Cooling and rewarming rates were not statistically different between the 2 testing conditions when measured by the 3 measurement methods. All temperature measurement methods correlated significantly. Conclusions.-Head and face insulation did not protect the simulated avalanche victim from faster cooling or rewarming. Because the 3 temperature measurement methods correlated, the ingestible capsule may provide an advantageous noninvasive method for snow burial and future hypothermia studies if interruptions in data transmission can be minimized.
引用
收藏
页码:21 / 28
页数:8
相关论文
共 24 条
[11]   AVALANCHE TRAUMA [J].
GROSSMAN, MD ;
SAFFLE, JR ;
THOMAS, F ;
TREMPER, B .
JOURNAL OF TRAUMA-INJURY INFECTION AND CRITICAL CARE, 1989, 29 (12) :1705-1709
[12]  
Johnson SM, 2001, WILD ENVIRON MED, V12, P244, DOI 10.1580/1080-6032(2001)012[0244:ATACHI]2.0.CO
[13]  
2
[14]   Local Head and Neck Cooling Leads to Hypothermia in Healthy Volunteers [J].
Kallmuenzer, Bernd ;
Beck, Alexander ;
Schwab, Stefan ;
Kollmar, Rainer .
CEREBROVASCULAR DISEASES, 2011, 32 (03) :207-210
[15]   Head and Neck Cooling Decreases Tympanic and Skin Temperature, But Significantly Increases Blood Pressure [J].
Koehn, Julia ;
Kollmar, Rainer ;
Cimpianu, Camelia-Lucia ;
Kallmuenzer, Bernd ;
Moeller, Sebastian ;
Schwab, Stefan ;
Hilz, Max J. .
STROKE, 2012, 43 (08) :2142-2148
[16]  
Locher T, 1996, Praxis (Bern 1994), V85, P1275
[17]   Cause of death in avalanche fatalities [J].
McIntosh, Scott E. ;
Grissom, Colin K. ;
Olivares, Christopher R. ;
Kim, Han S. ;
Tremper, Bruce .
WILDERNESS & ENVIRONMENTAL MEDICINE, 2007, 18 (04) :293-297
[18]   Full recovery of an avalanche victim with profound hypothermia and prolonged cardiac arrest treated by extracorporeal re-warming [J].
Oberhammer, Rosmarie ;
Beikircher, Werner ;
Hoermann, Christoph ;
Lorenz, Ingo ;
Pycha, Roger ;
Adler-Kastner, Liselotte ;
Brugger, Hermann .
RESUSCITATION, 2008, 76 (03) :474-480
[19]   Shivering heat production and core cooling during head-in and head-out immersion in 17°C water [J].
Pretorius, Thea ;
Cahill, Farrell ;
Kocay, Sheila ;
Giesbrecht, Gordon G. .
AVIATION SPACE AND ENVIRONMENTAL MEDICINE, 2008, 79 (05) :495-499
[20]   Thermal effects of whole head submersion in cold water on nonshivering humans [J].
Pretorius, Thea ;
Bristow, Gerald K. ;
Steinman, Alan M. ;
Giesbrecht, Gordon G. .
JOURNAL OF APPLIED PHYSIOLOGY, 2006, 101 (02) :669-675