• Prehosp Disaster Med · Sep 2006

    Reactions to cold exposure emphasize the need for weather protection in prehospital care: an experimental study.

    • Niina S Lintu, Matti A K Mattila, Jaana A Holopainen, Mari Koivunen, and Osmo O P Hänninen.
    • Institute of Biomedicine/Department of Physiology, University of Kuopio, Finland.
    • Prehosp Disaster Med. 2006 Sep 1; 21 (5): 316-20.

    IntroductionExposure to cold temperature is a serious but often neglected problem in prehospital care. It not only is an uncomfortable, subjective experience, but it also can cause severe disturbances in vital functions, gradually leading to hypothermia.ObjectiveThe aim of this study was to examine healthy subjects' physiological and subjective reactions to cold exposure (30 minutes at -5 degrees C in the a climatic chamber) while they were lying in a protective covering.MethodsHealthy volunteers (n = 20) participated in the experiment, which consisted of a 10-minute stabilization period of vital functions at room temperature (23 degrees C), 30 minutes of cold exposure (-5 degrees C), and a 30-minute recovery period at room temperature. Subjects lay supinely in protective covering during the entire experiment. Skin temperatures, oxygen saturation, pulse rates, pulse wave amplitude in the middle finger, and surface electromyography (EMG) activity of the major pectoral muscle were recorded continuously during the test. Before and immediately after the cold exposure, tympanic membrane temperatures were measured. In addition, subjects were asked to estimate cold using a standard scale.ResultsDuring the cold exposure, the decrease in tympanic membrane temperature was not significant. The pulse wave amplitude in the finger decreased sharply upon entering the cold chamber. Skin temperatures, especially of the fingers and toes, decreased during the cold exposure. There were no clear signs of shivering in electromyographic recordings. Subjective cold feelings followed decreasing skin temperatures. Skin temperatures did not return quickly. Even 30 minutes after the exposure, all the skin temperatures still had not returned to normal levels. However, subjective cold feeling was relieved immediately.ConclusionsCold exposure provoked immediate protective vasoconstriction in the peripheral compartment, which caused linear decreases of local skin temperatures. This probably was triggered from the unprotected face and upper respiratory areas.

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