How to Recognize and Treat Heat Stroke and Heat Exhaustion

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Ez2cDave

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How to Recognize and Treat Heat Stroke and Heat Exhaustion

Brett & Kate McKay • July 28, 2022

How to Recognize & Treat Heat Exhaustion

Heat Exhaustion Symptoms

Heat exhaustion occurs when your body can no longer cool itself down through sweating due to a loss of water and electrolytes. Heat exhaustion needs to be treated as soon as you recognize it in yourself or others. Left untreated, it can develop into its more severe sibling: heat stroke.
Symptoms of heat exhaustion include:

Heavy sweating
Cold, pale, and clammy skin
Fast, weak pulse
Nausea or vomiting
Muscle cramps
Tiredness or weakness
Dizziness
Headache
Brief fainting (passing out)

How to Treat Heat Exhaustion

The goal of treating heat exhaustion is to cool the sufferer down and restore their fluids.

Move to a cool room. If you don’t have access to an air-conditioned room, at least move to a shady spot.

Take a cold shower or bath. If that’s not possible, drape (do not tightly wrap — this will trap heat) cool, wet towels/cloths on the body. Turn a fan on these towels if you can.

Remove extra clothing.

Sip cool fluids, like water and Gatorade.

If heat exhaustion symptoms continue for an hour despite your treatment, seek professional medical assistance.

How to Recognize & Treat Heat Exhaustion

Heat Stroke Symptoms

Heat stroke is the most serious of heat-related illnesses. With heat stroke, the body has lost its ability to cool itself down, resulting in a dangerously high internal body temperature (above 104 degrees Fahrenheit). High internal body temperature is potentially life-threatening as it can cause seizures, organ failure, and rhabdomyolysis. Even if you recover from heat stroke, you can still suffer long-term damage to your heart, brain (creating cognitive deficiencies), kidneys (requiring lifelong dialysis or a transplant), and liver (also requiring a transplant). Heat stroke victims often die months after they’ve “recovered.”

To guide me on the intricacies of identifying and treating heat stroke, I talked to Dr. Sean Langan, a research assistant at the Korey Stringer Institute at the University of Connecticut. The Korey Stringer Institute specializes in research in preventing heat stroke deaths among athletes.

Heat stroke symptoms include:

Central nervous system (CNS) dysfunction:

Confusion
Aggression/agitation (Dr. Langan says you frequently see heat stroke victims bite and
punch people)
Dizziness
Fainting
Seizures

Very high body temperature (104 degrees F or higher)

Red, hot, dry skin (no sweating). Sean notes that you rarely see dry skin in people with exertional heat stroke (caused by exercising or working in the heat). Those exerting themselves in the heat may still be sweaty, and you’ll need to be on the lookout for other symptoms, particularly CNS dysfunction.

Throbbing headache
Nausea/vomiting
Rapid breathing
Rapid pulse

According to Dr. Langan, the critical heat stroke symptom to be on the lookout for is CNS dysfunction:

You can have really fit people who have an internal body temperature of 104 degrees Fahrenheit at the end of a marathon who are fine. Their body is adapted to having that high of an internal temp so they don’t have any CNS dysfunction and they cool down quickly after they finish their race.

You can also have someone who has an internal body temperature of 103, but they’re experiencing CNS dysfunction. This person has heat stroke and needs to be treated.

If you see someone who’s been in the heat who’s showing signs of CNS dysfunction, your best bet is to start treating that person for heat stroke. To confirm, take their temperature with a rectal thermometer (it will give you the most accurate reading) to see if it’s around that 104-degree mark.

How to Treat Heat Stroke

If you suspect that you or someone else has heat stroke, immediately call 911. This is a life-threatening emergency.

After you’ve called 911 and while waiting for help, your goal is to cool the victim down as quickly as possible. Research shows that recovery from heat stroke is nearly 100% so long as the body is cooled down within 30 minutes of its onset. After that, serious, lasting, and potentially fatal complications will kick in. So time is truly of the essence.

Move to a cool location.

Remove excess clothing.

Put the victim in an ice bath. This is the best treatment to pursue. If that’s not possible, douse the victim with cold water and place cold, wet cloths/towels all over their body.

Pay special attention to cooling certain areas of the body. While you should cool the entire body down, research from Stanford scientist Craig Heller suggests that you shouldn’t overlook the palms of the hands and the bottoms of the feet. When we overheat, blood flow increases to these areas of the body, which Heller calls “natural mammalian radiators.” You can take advantage of this increased blood flow by placing cool rags on the palms of the victim’s hands and the bottoms of their feet. The cool rag will cool the blood, and the blood will return through the veins directly to the heart, helping to bring down the body’s temperature. Cold compresses in the groin and armpits will do the same thing.

Once you’ve cooled the person down, provide fluids. Dr. Langan told me giving fluids to a heat stroke victim isn’t a top priority as it doesn’t do much to help cool the person down, which is your primary task. Once the victim is cooled down, offer fluids to re-hydrate.

Continue monitoring internal temperature until it is down to 102. According to Dr. Langan, that’s the safe zone.

Preventing Heat Exhaustion and Heat Stroke

An ounce of prevention is worth a pound of cure, and there are several things you can do to prevent heat exhaustion and heat stroke:

Drink plenty of water (and electrolytes). Duh! Your body cools itself by sweating. If you don’t have enough fluids in your body, you can’t sweat. If you know you will be outside in the heat, hydrate beforehand. While you’re out there, drink at least 8 ounces of water every 15 to 20 minutes.

Don’t skimp on the electrolytes either. Aim to ingest 500-700 milligrams of sodium for every hour you exercise. You can get this sodium from sports drinks or electrolyte pills. I like using a liquid electrolyte product, which allows me to add more or less to my water, depending on how much I’ve exercised/sweated.

Avoid being outside during the hottest parts of the day and when it’s humid. 3 to 5 p.m. is usually the hottest part of the day. If you can, stay inside during this window.

Also keep in mind that it’s harder for the body to cool itself the more humid it is.

Be fit. Fit people are not immune to heat stroke, but fitter people are generally better able to handle the heat. Start exercising. It’s the cure for almost everything.

Gradually acclimate to the heat. If you can’t avoid being outside in the heat due to scheduled work or sports, you can help your body adjust to it to reduce the likelihood of developing a heat illness.

Dr. Langan highlighted several adaptations your body makes as it acclimatizes to the heat. For example, you sweat more and start sweating at a lower body temp, your plasma volume increases, and your core body temp stays lower longer at a given workload.

Due to American football players dying from heat stroke in the late summer and early fall, several states have implemented mandatory preseason heat acclimation protocols for high school athletes. These states have seen a 55% reduction in heat illnesses since beginning these protocols.

The gist of the heat acclimation protocol is to gradually increase the length and intensity of activity done in the heat. Regular sauna use can also help speed the acclimation process along.
Dr. Langan told me that you can start to see heat adaptation in as little as 3-5 days, but if you really want to ensure you’re ready for hard work in high temps, two weeks is the ideal acclimation time.

Be smart, plan ahead, get adaptable, and you’ll be ready to face the heat.
 
Thanks for sharing. Everyone should know what symptoms to look for, and how to treat it.

I'll share another method I use to stay cool. I always bring a spray bottle to hot launches. Some mist on my face and shirt is magical. That's how I survived 5 days of LDRS at lucerne, in the 110-115 degree heat and all the other trips I take to lucerne.
 
I found this in the “Similar Threads” function and decided to bump it. While not likely to be super frequent as we head into the northern hemisphere winter, there can still be strange days where warmer weather and exertion gets the best of people. With an outdoor hobby like ours, being safe in it is crucial.

I had the benefit of drilling for first aid relentlessly with the Boy Scouts, and it served us well on the handful of occasions where things went sideways. Nobody panicked, everyone just either got to work or got out of the way. Unfortunately I’ve also been forced to put those skills to use in the years since aging out of the program.

Not everyone gets this, though, and for those people, I say a little bit of instruction on the safest emergency treatments is better than nothing.

At LDRS this year I left my girlfriend the keys to my truck and let her run the A/C as much as she needed to be safe. I’d rather burn an extra tank of gas than deal with a medical emergency on the range. We also set up a shade tent, drank more water than we felt was strictly necessary, and left the range to seek indoor shelter during the hottest parts of the day.
 
Anybody heard from EZ2cDave lately? Just wondering if he's okay since he hasnt seemed to post much since August?
 
Anybody heard from EZ2cDave lately? Just wondering if he's okay since he hasnt seemed to post much since August?
Nope.

I’ve actually had that same question about @fyrwrxz , I actually met up with him a couple times before he disappeared from my radar around the same time. Unfortunately I haven’t been able to get out to Tripoli San Diego to ask those guys.
 
Nope.

I’ve actually had that same question about @fyrwrxz , I actually met up with him a couple times before he disappeared from my radar around the same time. Unfortunately I haven’t been able to get out to Tripoli San Diego to ask those guys.
Good point about fyrwrx
 
Over on YORF, he said he’d been banned from here.

He was warned by the mods about multiple offenses. Despite warnings and chances, he continued to cause issues. I am not going to justify or adjudicate the decision on the forum. The bottom line is he is gone for 90 days.
 
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He was warned by the mods about multiple offenses. Despite warnings and chances, he continued to cause issues. I am not going to justify or adjudicate the decision on the forum. The bottom line is he is gone permanently.
Thanks for the explanation. I don’t think any of us were questioning that decision.

Anyway, heat emergencies. Nasty business. Avoid and know how to treat them, or they’ll make living hard.
 
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He was warned by the mods about multiple offenses. Despite warnings and chances, he continued to cause issues. I am not going to justify or adjudicate the decision on the forum. The bottom line is he is gone for 90 days.

To correct that - it is only 90 days.
 
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