Golden Francis St Clair, Francis Thomas James Roose, Gallimore Deborah, Pethybridge Roger
Extreme Environments Laboratory, Department of Sport and Exercise Science (DSES), University of Portsmouth, Spinnaker Building, Cambridge Road, Portsmouth PO1 2ER, UK.
Extrem Physiol Med. 2013 Aug 8;2(1):23. doi: 10.1186/2046-7648-2-23.
Environmental conditions in the Falklands Conflict of 1982 favoured the genesis of cold injuries. Immediately, post-war, cold injury morbidity and its contributory factors were assessed, in the personnel of UK 3 Commando Brigade (3 Cdo Bde).
A questionnaire survey of the 3,006 members of 3 Cdo Bde who landed on the islands was conducted within 6-10 weeks of the end of hostilities. Questions included those relating to features of cold injury, body morphology, age, symptoms experienced, past medical history and other possible contributory causes. Additionally, the unit medical team conducted a cursory examination. Data were sent to the Royal Navy Institute of Naval Medicine (INM), where the degree of likely cold injury was broadly classified ('asymptomatic' 'mild', 'moderate' or 'severe'). A sample (total 109) was then selected at random from each category and subsequently examined and tested at the INM (nerve conduction, photoplethysmography and thermography testing). Forty-seven non-cold exposed sailors acted as a control group. These contemporaneous records have now been identified and interrogated.
Some 2,354 (78%) completed questionnaires were returned, revealing that 1,505 (64%) had experienced symptoms of non-freezing cold injury. The morbidity in the infantry units was significantly greater than that in the support troops (1,051 (76%) vs 454 (46%), p < 0.05). No evidence was found to support an influence of a number of factors, commonly believed to have an aetiological role in the production of cold injury. Whilst there was no significant relationship between past history and cold injury morbidity in the brigade as a whole, or within the infantry units alone, an association was identified in the collective infantry units (73%) and the support/headquarter units (59%) (p < 0.05).In comparison with uninjured sailors who acted as controls (n = 47), nerve conduction was impaired in 35% of those screened some months after returning to the UK, while the photoplethysmography and thermographic responses to a cold sensitivity test showed that most (including those classed by questionnaire as asymptomatic) had residual 'cold sensitivity'.
Although the passage of time has made retrospective interrogation of historical documents hard, the available data do appear to offer valuable historical and clinical insights. Cold injury affected the majority of those fighting in the cold temperate climate of the Falklands. The overwhelming environmental conditions meant that, for most, a past history of cold injury did not appear to represent a risk factor for subsequent injury, as is the case for less severe conditions. Importantly, even asymptomatic individuals when tested often showed physiological evidence of cold injury-perhaps predisposing them to subsequent elevation in risk.
1982年福克兰群岛冲突中的环境条件有利于冻伤的发生。战后,英国皇家海军陆战队第3突击旅(3 Cdo Bde)的人员立即对冻伤发病率及其促成因素进行了评估。
在敌对行动结束后的6 - 10周内,对登上该岛的3006名第3突击旅成员进行了问卷调查。问题包括与冻伤特征、身体形态、年龄、经历的症状、既往病史以及其他可能的促成原因相关的问题。此外,部队医疗队进行了粗略检查。数据被发送到皇家海军海军医学研究所(INM),在那里对可能的冻伤程度进行了大致分类(“无症状”“轻度”“中度”或“重度”)。然后从每个类别中随机抽取一个样本(共109个),随后在INM进行检查和测试(神经传导、光电容积描记法和热成像测试)。47名未暴露于寒冷环境的水手作为对照组。现已识别并查阅了这些同期记录。
共收回约2354份(78%)完整问卷,显示1505人(64%)有非冻结性冻伤症状。步兵部队的发病率明显高于支援部队(1051人(76%)对454人(46%),p < 0.05)。未发现证据支持许多通常被认为在冻伤发生中具有病因学作用的因素的影响。虽然在整个旅或仅在步兵部队中,既往病史与冻伤发病率之间没有显著关系,但在集体步兵部队(73%)和支援/总部部队(59%)中发现了关联(p < 0.05)。与作为对照组的未受伤水手(n = 47)相比,返回英国几个月后接受筛查的人员中,35%的人神经传导受损,而对冷敏测试的光电容积描记法和热成像反应表明,大多数人(包括那些问卷分类为无症状的人)有残留的“冷敏感性”。
尽管随着时间的推移,对历史文件进行回顾性查阅变得困难,但现有数据似乎确实提供了有价值的历史和临床见解。冻伤影响了大多数在福克兰群岛寒冷温带气候中作战的人员。压倒性的环境条件意味着,对大多数人来说,既往冻伤史似乎并不像在不太严重的情况下那样是后续受伤的危险因素。重要的是,即使是无症状个体在接受测试时也常常显示出冻伤的生理证据——这可能使他们随后面临的风险增加。