| Literature DB >> 24070118 |
Francis St Clair Golden1, Thomas James Roose Francis, Deborah Gallimore, Roger Pethybridge.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: 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).Entities:
Year: 2013 PMID: 24070118 PMCID: PMC3750324 DOI: 10.1186/2046-7648-2-23
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Extrem Physiol Med ISSN: 2046-7648
Reported cold injuries in a variety of conflicts throughout history
| Circa 400 BC | Armenia (Xenophon) | ‘Cold’ cause of approximately 6,000 (60%) casualties |
|---|---|---|
| 218 BC | Hannibal crossing the Alps | 19,000 (50%) survived from 38,000 |
| 1719 | Swedish/Norwegian | 3,700 Swedish dead from a force of 5,000; 600 permanently crippled from frostbite |
| 1778 | American War of Independence | Up to 10% of casualties in some battles |
| 1812 | Napoleonic/Russian campaign | 100,000 KIA; 200,000 DNBI (majority from cold injury and hypothermia); 12,000 men from the 12th Division all perished except for 350 |
| 1854–1856 | Crimean War | 2,000 cold injured out of 50,000 |
| 1861–1865 | American Civil War | 15,000 cold injury casualties |
| 1870–1871 | Franco/Prussian | 1,450 CI |
| 1899–1902 | Boer War | ‘Many with cold injuries’ |
| 1904–1905 | Russo/Japanese | ‘Staggering numbers’ |
| 1912 | Balkans | ‘Many cold casualties’ |
| 1914–1918 | World War I | British 115,361; French 79,000; Italians 38,000; Germans (number unknown) but had special hospitals dedicated to treating cold injuries (distinction between freezing and non-freezing injury, ‘Trench Foot’, was first made) |
| 1939–1945 | World War II | Western Europe: British 500; Americans 91,000 |
| Italian campaign, winter 1943–1944: British 102 cold injury casualties (ratio 1:45); | ||
| Americans 4,560 (ratio 1:4) | ||
| At sea, ‘Immersion Foot’ was first described | ||
| Russian Front: Germans massive casualties (special cold injury hospitals) | ||
| Attu (Aleutians): US Marines 1,200 in a 15-day period of conflict with a ratio of 1:1 with battle casualties |
Figure 1The photoplethysmograpic blood flow traces of two participants. An uninjured participant (A) and a cold-sensitive Royal Marine (B) who still had residual signs of NFCI at the time of testing.
Questionnaire data showing numbers of questionnaires returned and NFCI morbidity in 3 Commando Brigade personnel
| Commando infantry units | | ||
| 40 Commando | 652 | 398 (61) | 314 (79) |
| 42 Commando | 494 | 460 (93) | 357 (78) |
| 45 Commando | 535 | 519 (97) | 380 (73) |
| Total | 1,681 | 1,377 (82) | 1,051 (76) |
| Army support units | | ||
| 29 Cdo Regt RA | 396 | 210 (53) | 107(51) |
| 59 Indp Cdo Sqn RE | 179 | 106 (59) | 70 (66) |
| Total | 575 | 316 (55) | 177 (56) |
| RM support units | | ||
| CLR | 328 | 328 (100) | 87 (27) |
| Brigade HQ & Sigs Sqn | 422 | 333 (79) | 190 (57) |
| Total | 750 | 661 (88) | 277 (42) |
| Sub-total (all support units) | 1325 | 977 (74) | 454 (46) |
| Grand total | |||
Numbers of questionnaires returned were in rounded up percentages. 3 Cdo Bde 3 Commando Brigade, 29 Cdo Regt RA Commando Regiment Royal Artillery, 59 Indp Cdo Sqn RE 59 Independent Commando Squadron Royal Engineers, CLR commando logistics regiment, HQ &Sigs Sqn brigade headquarters and signal squadron.
Figure 2Thermographic feet images of uninjured participant (A) and NFCI patient (B) to cold air (10°C). Thermal scale on left side of picture: white/pale blue = coldest and red = warmest. Top right image: on initial exposure to cold air. Top left image: after 5 min of exposure and just prior to forced convective stimulus. Bottom left image: at the end of a 5-min forced convective stimulus. Bottom right image: at the end of a further 5 min of exposure to still air.