National Research Center in Complementary and Alternative Medicine (NAFKAM), Institute of Community Medicine, UiT- The Arctic University of Norway, Tromsø, Norway.
Joint medical services, Defence Research and Development Canada-Toronto Research Center, Sessvollmoen.
Int J Circumpolar Health. 2023 Dec;82(1):2203923. doi: 10.1080/22423982.2023.2203923.
Freezing cold injuries (FCI) are a common risk in extreme cold weather operations. Although the risks have long been recognised, injury occurrences tend to be sparse and geographically distributed, with relatively few cases to study in a systematic way. The first challenge to improve FCI medical management is to develop a common nomenclature for FCI classification. This is critical for the development of meaningful epidemiological reports on the magnitude and severity of FCI, for the standardisation of patient inclusion criteria for treatment studies, and for the development of clinical diagnosis and treatment algorithms.
A scoping review of the literature using PubMed and cross-checked with Google Scholar, using search terms related to freezing cold injury and frostbite, highlighted a paucity of published clinical papers and little agreement on classification schemes.
A total of 74 papers were identified, and 28 were included in the review. Published reports and studies can be generally grouped into four different classification schemes that are based on (1) injury morphology; (2) signs and symptoms; (3) pathophysiology; and (4) clinical outcome. The nomenclature in the different classification systems is not coherent and the discrete classification limits are not evidence based.
All the classification systems are necessary and relevant to FCI medical management for sustainment of soldier health and performance in cold weather operations and winter warfare. Future FCI reports should clearly characterise the nature of the FCI into existing classification schemes for surveillance (morphology, symptoms, and appearance), identifying risk-factors, clinical guidelines, and agreed inclusion/exclusion criteria for a future treatment trial.
冻伤是极寒天气作业中的常见风险。尽管人们早就认识到了这种风险,但冻伤的发生往往较为稀少且分布在不同地区,因此可用于系统研究的病例相对较少。改善冻伤医疗管理的首要挑战是为冻伤分类制定通用术语。这对于制定关于冻伤严重程度和范围的有意义的流行病学报告、治疗研究中患者纳入标准的标准化、临床诊断和治疗算法的制定都至关重要。
使用 PubMed 进行文献范围界定审查,并与 Google Scholar 交叉核对,使用与冷冻伤和冻伤相关的搜索词,突出显示发表的临床论文很少,分类方案也几乎没有达成一致。
共确定了 74 篇论文,其中 28 篇被纳入审查。已发表的报告和研究通常可以分为四种不同的分类方案,分别基于:(1)损伤形态;(2)体征和症状;(3)病理生理学;和(4)临床结果。不同分类系统中的命名法不一致,离散的分类界限也没有依据。
所有分类系统对于在寒冷天气作业和冬季战争中维持士兵健康和表现都与冻伤的医疗管理相关。未来的冻伤报告应明确将冻伤的性质归入现有的分类方案中,用于监测(形态、症状和外观),确定风险因素、临床指南以及未来治疗试验的纳入/排除标准。