Wood Felix, Roiz-de-Sa D, Pynn H, Smith J E, Bishop J, Hemingway R
Emergency Department, Derriford Hospital, Plymouth, UK
Academic Department of Military Emergency Medicine, Royal Centre for Defence Medicine, Birmingham, UK.
BMJ Mil Health. 2024 May 22;170(3):216-222. doi: 10.1136/military-2022-002133.
Despite mitigation efforts, exertional heat stroke (EHS) is known to occur in military personnel during training and operations. It has significant potential to cause preventable morbidity and mortality. International consensus from sports medicine organisations supports treating EHS with early rapid cooling by immersing the casualty in cold water. However, evidence remains sparse and the practice is not yet widespread in the UK.
Following changes to enable on-site ice cold water immersion (ICWI) at the Royal Marines Commando Training Centre, Lympstone, UK, we prospectively gathered data on 35 patients treated with ICWI over a 3-year period. These data included the incidence of adverse events (e.g. death, cardiac arrest or critical care admission) as the primary outcome. Basic anthropometric data, cooling rates achieved and biochemical and haematological test results on days 0-5 were also gathered and analysed.
Despite being a cohort of patients in whom we might expect significant morbidity and mortality based on the severity of EHS at presentation, none experienced a serious adverse event. In this cohort with rapid initiation of effective cooling, biochemical derangement appeared less severe than that reported in previous studies. Higher body mass index (BMI) was associated with a lower cooling rate across a range of values previously reported as potentially of clinical significance.
This case series supports recent updates to UK military guidance that ICWI should be more widely adopted for the treatment of EHS. Clinicians should be aware of likely patterns of blood test abnormalities in the days following EHS. Further work should seek to establish the impact of lower rates of cooling and develop strategies to optimise cooling in patients with higher BMI.
尽管采取了缓解措施,但已知在训练和行动期间,军事人员会发生劳力性热射病(EHS)。它极有可能导致可预防的发病和死亡。运动医学组织的国际共识支持通过将伤员浸入冷水中进行早期快速降温来治疗EHS。然而,证据仍然稀少,并且这种做法在英国尚未广泛应用。
在英国林普斯通皇家海军陆战队突击训练中心进行了相关变更,以实现现场冰水浸泡(ICWI)后,我们前瞻性地收集了3年期间接受ICWI治疗的35例患者的数据。这些数据包括不良事件(如死亡、心脏骤停或重症监护病房收治)的发生率作为主要结局。还收集并分析了基本人体测量数据、达到的降温速率以及第0至5天的生化和血液学检测结果。
尽管根据就诊时EHS的严重程度,我们预计该队列患者会有较高的发病率和死亡率,但无一例发生严重不良事件。在这个迅速开始有效降温的队列中,生化紊乱似乎比先前研究报告的情况要轻。在先前报告的一系列具有潜在临床意义的值范围内,较高的体重指数(BMI)与较低的降温速率相关。
这个病例系列支持英国军事指南的最新更新,即ICWI应更广泛地用于治疗EHS。临床医生应了解EHS后几天血液检测异常的可能模式。进一步的工作应致力于确定较低降温速率的影响,并制定优化高BMI患者降温的策略。