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1. During OIF1, six Soldiers died from heat injury. 28 suffered a heat stroke.
Most heat injuries actually occur at CAT 0. Education and awareness are all that is needed to drastically reduce incidence.
On deployment, the risks of heat injury are increased due to body armor, carrying a full combat load, working in desert environments, adrenaline, and not always having approved water sources available.
The medical brigade in theater can tell when a new unit rotates in because of the spike in heat injuries. The camps’ medical facilities typically begin seeing heat casualties within the first week of a unit’s arrival. One unit that rotated through in summer 2004 evacuated as many as 10 percent of its Soldiers to the local Level II facility in a single day.
During OIF1, six Soldiers died from heat injury. 28 suffered a heat stroke.
Most heat injuries actually occur at CAT 0. Education and awareness are all that is needed to drastically reduce incidence.
On deployment, the risks of heat injury are increased due to body armor, carrying a full combat load, working in desert environments, adrenaline, and not always having approved water sources available.
The medical brigade in theater can tell when a new unit rotates in because of the spike in heat injuries. The camps’ medical facilities typically begin seeing heat casualties within the first week of a unit’s arrival. One unit that rotated through in summer 2004 evacuated as many as 10 percent of its Soldiers to the local Level II facility in a single day.
2. Heat Injury Hazards are Cumulative H- Heat category past 3 days
E- Exertion level past 3 days
A- Acclimation/
other individual risk factors
T- Temperature/rest overnight
Cluster of heat injuries on prior
days= HIGH RISK
3.
Poor fitness ( 2 mi run > 16 min)
Large body mass
Minor illness
Drugs (cold and allergy, blood pressure)
Highly motivated
Individual Risk Factors
4. Individual Risk Factors Supplements- ephedra
Recent alcohol use
Prior heat injury
Skin problems- rash, sunburn, poison ivy
Age>40
5. Risk MitigationAvoid Heat Loading Modify schedule- time of day, rest
Clothing-
Loose layers
Formations:
Wide spacing
Shade soldiers
Cumulative- avoid strenuous back-to-back events
6. Risk MitigationDump Heat Load Cool overnight temp
Cold showers
7. Develop Controls Track Wet Bulb Globe Temp (WBGT)
Track hydration of Soldiers
Fluid replacement/ work/ rest guidelines
Keep urine lemonade color (light yellow)
All unit leaders must be familiar with heat injury prevention and recognition
Know the Soldiers who are high risk
Ensure water points accessible/ utilized
8. Symptoms of Mild Injury Dizziness
Headache
Nausea
Unsteady walk
Weakness
Muscle cramps
These folks need rest, water, evaluation
These are your
“canaries in the mine”
9. Mild Heat Injury Management Rest Soldier in shade
Loosen uniform/ remove head gear
Have Soldier drink 2 quarts of water over 1 hour
Evacuate if no improvement in 30 min, or if Soldier’s condition worsens
10. Heat Stroke Abnormal brain function- elevated body temperature
Examples:
Confused
Combative
Passed out
Sudden death
11. Heat Stroke When a soldier’s brain isn’t working correctly- COOL and CALL
Treat any soldier who develops abnormal brain function during warm weather activity as a heat stroke victim
The sooner a victim with heat stroke is cooled, the less damage will be done to his brain and organs
12. Pre-Hospital Care Cooling is first priority- can reduce mortality from 50% to 5%
Drench with water
Fan
Iced sheets
Massage large muscles while cooling
Stop if shivering occurs
13. May not be able to follow recommendations exactly due to mission requirements, however it is a guideline.
Remember most injuries occur in Cat 0, this is because it is usually in the morning before we have had a chance to hydrate.
May not be able to follow recommendations exactly due to mission requirements, however it is a guideline.
Remember most injuries occur in Cat 0, this is because it is usually in the morning before we have had a chance to hydrate.
14. HEAT INJURY PREVENTION Hydration is the most important element in a plan to prevent heat casualties. Full hydration is critical to the prevention of heat casualties because it is essential to maintain both blood volume for thermoregulatory blood flow and sweating. Both are reduced by dehydration. Consequently, the dehydrated soldier has less ability to maintain body temperature in the heat.
Water requirements are not reduced by any form of training or acclimatization. Exercises to teach soldiers to work or fight with less water are fruitless and dangerous.
Units which have soldiers who do not drink because they do not have opportunities to urinate have a leadership problem. Unit leaders must reinforce of hydration by planning for all aspects of adequate hydration: elimination as well as consumption.
In hot environments, water losses can reach 15 liters per day per soldier. Complete replacement requires realistic estimates of potable water requirements, an adequate water logistic system and soldiers who understand and act on their water requirement. Water for hygiene will be needed in addition to water for drinking.
There is no advantage to carbohydrate/electrolyte beverages beyond their palatability which may encourage drinking. They should not be the sole source of water as they can be mildly hypertonic.
DO no consume more than 12 quarts in one day.Hydration is the most important element in a plan to prevent heat casualties. Full hydration is critical to the prevention of heat casualties because it is essential to maintain both blood volume for thermoregulatory blood flow and sweating. Both are reduced by dehydration. Consequently, the dehydrated soldier has less ability to maintain body temperature in the heat.
Water requirements are not reduced by any form of training or acclimatization. Exercises to teach soldiers to work or fight with less water are fruitless and dangerous.
Units which have soldiers who do not drink because they do not have opportunities to urinate have a leadership problem. Unit leaders must reinforce of hydration by planning for all aspects of adequate hydration: elimination as well as consumption.
In hot environments, water losses can reach 15 liters per day per soldier. Complete replacement requires realistic estimates of potable water requirements, an adequate water logistic system and soldiers who understand and act on their water requirement. Water for hygiene will be needed in addition to water for drinking.
There is no advantage to carbohydrate/electrolyte beverages beyond their palatability which may encourage drinking. They should not be the sole source of water as they can be mildly hypertonic.
DO no consume more than 12 quarts in one day.
15. Drugs that Interfere with Heat Regulation
Antihistamines (benadryl, atarax, ctm)
Decongestants (sudafed)
High Blood Pressure (diuretics, beta blockers)
Psychiatric Drugs (tricyclic antidepressants, antipsychotics)
16. ScenarioAwake Victim- Muscle Cramps/Headache
Move to shade/ or air conditioning
Remove outer layer of clothing/ headgear
2 canteens of water over 1 hour
17. ScenarioAwake Victim- Abnormal Behavior Move to shade
Remove outer layer of clothing
Call for evacuation
Begin rapid cooling- iced sheets
CLS qualified individuals may administer an IV after evacuation and cooling started
18. Water Intoxication Do not “Force Hydration”
Mental status changes
Vomiting
History of large volume of water consumed
Poor food intake
Abdomen distended/bloated
Copious clear urine One last thought– Keep Water Intoxication in mind if a person appears to have followed the heat/rest and hydration recommendations, but shows the symptoms listed. One last thought– Keep Water Intoxication in mind if a person appears to have followed the heat/rest and hydration recommendations, but shows the symptoms listed.