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| Hypothermia - General Info | Body Heat Loss |
If you are outdoors enjoying your favorite sport, you presumably do not intend to jeopardize your life. Hypothermia may be a new word to you, but it is the only word that describes the rapid,progressive mental and physical collapse accompanying the chilling of the inner core of the human body. Hypothermia is caused by exposure to cold, aggravated by wet, wind, and exhaustion. It is the number one killer of outdoor recreationalists
COLD KILLS IN TWO DISTINCT STEPS EXPOSURE AND EXHAUSTION
The moment your body begins to loose heat faster than it produces
it, you are undergoing exposure. Two things happen:
1.You voluntarily exercise to stay warm.
2.Your body makes involuntary adjustments to preserve normal temperature in
the vital organs, and you start shivering. Either response drains your energy
reserves. The only way to stop the drain is to reduce the degree of exposure.
THE TIME
TO PREVENT HYPOTHERMIA IS DURING THE PERIOD OF EXPOSURE AND GRADUAL EXHAUSTION
HYPOTHERMIA
If exposure continues until your energy reserves are exhausted:
1.Cold reaches the brain depriving you of good judgement and reasoning power.
You will not realize this is happening.
2.You will lose control of your hands. This is hypothermia. Your internal temperature
is sliding downward. Without treatment, this slide leads to stupor, collapse,
and death.
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AVOID EXPOSURE 1.STAY DRY. When clothes
get wet, they lose about ninety percent of their insulating value. Wool
loses less as does many of the new synthetics. Cotton and wet down are
worthless. |
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TERMINATE
EXPOSURE
If you can not stay dry and warm under existing weather conditions, using the
clothes you have with you, do whatever is necessary to be less exposed.
1.BE SMART ENOUGH TO GIVE UP REACHING THE PEAK, OR WHATEVER YOU HAD IN MIND.
2.Get out of the wind and rain. Build a fire. Concentrate on making your camp
or bivouac as secure and comfortable as possible. NEVER IGNORE SHIVERING
Persistent or violent shivering is a clear warning that you are on the verge
of hypothermia.
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MAKE CAMP OR GET BACK TO YOUR VEHICLE. BEWARE OF EXHAUSTION Make camp while you
still have a reserve of energy. Allow for the fact that exposure greatly
reduces your normal endurance. You may think you are doing fine when the
fact that you are exercising is the only thing preventing your going into
hypothermia. If exhaustion forces you to stop, however brief: |
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APPOINT
A LEADER
Make the best protected and experienced member of your party responsible for
calling a halt before the least protected member becomes exhausted or goes into
violent shivering.
DETECT
HYPOTHERMIA
If your group is exposed to WIND, COLD, OR WET, think hypothermia. Watch yourself
and others for the symptoms:
1.Uncontrollable fits of shivering.
2.Vague, slow, slurred speech.
3.Memory lapses, or incoherence.
4.Immobile, fumbling hands.
5.Frequent stumbling.
6.Drowsiness (to sleep is to die.)
7.Apparent exhaustion. Inability to get up after a rest.
TREATMENT
The victim may deny he/she is in trouble. Believe the symptoms, not the person.
Even mild symptoms demand immediate treatment.
1.Get the victim out of the wind and rain.
2.Strip off all wet clothes.
3.If the victim is only mildly impaired:
Give him/her warm drinks. (only small amounts)
Get him/her into dry clothes and a warm dry sleeping bag. Well-wrapped warm
(not hot) rocks or canteens placed in the crotch and under the arms anywhere
the main arteries are close to the surface of the skin, will hasten recovery.
4.If the patient is semi-conscious or worse: Try to keep him/her awake. (Do
not give hot liquids by mouth.)
Leave him/her stripped. Put him/her in a sleeping bag with another person (also
stripped) to transfer heat. If you can put the victim between two donors, skin
to skin contact is very effective treatment.
5.Build a fire to warm canteens and rocks for warming the victim.
6.Transport the victim as soon as possible to the closest hospital for monitoring.
It takes a very long time to warm the inner core and only a rectal hypothermia
thermometer is long enough to find out what the inner core temperature really
is. DON'T DELAY!
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The body
loses heat in five ways: Respiration, Evaporation, Conduction, Radiation
and Convection. |
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