| Literature DB >> 28529728 |
Christopher Press1,2, Christopher Duffy3, Jonathan Williams3, Ben Cooper1,4, Neil Chapman1,5.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Accidental hypothermia is common in those who sustain injuries in remote environments. This is unpleasant and associated with adverse effects on subsequent patient outcomes. To minimise further heat loss, a range of insulating systems are available to mountain rescue teams although the most effective and cost-efficient have yet to be determined.Entities:
Keywords: Hypothermia; Insulation; Mountain rescue; Pre-hospital; Trauma
Year: 2017 PMID: 28529728 PMCID: PMC5437540 DOI: 10.1186/s13728-017-0055-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Extrem Physiol Med ISSN: 2046-7648
Fig. 1Standard insulation system utilised by Edale Mountain Rescue Team. The casualty is placed in the vacuum mattress and wrapped in a Pertex©/pile blanket (a) This can be further supplemented by placing this system within the heavier-weight casualty “Wiggy” bag (b left-hand image—empty Wiggy bag; Right-hand image—Wiggy bag loaded with casualty enclosed in a vacuum mattress/Pertex©/pile blanket)
Fig. 2Equipment and insulation systems utilised in this study. Heavy-weight casualty “Wiggy” bag, vacuum mattress and Pertex©/pile blanket (a). Mountain equipment heavy-weight casualty bag, Blizzard bag and plastic orange survival bag (b). Bell mountain rescue stretcher routinely used by Edale MRT (c). The MCI thermal manikin (d)
Fig. 3Comparison of insulation system used in mountain rescue. Temperature recordings were taken as described in “Methods” (n = 3 for each system). Each system was allowed to equilibrate to the designated start temperature of 42 °C. This was then taken as t = 0 min and recordings were subsequently taken every 10 min for 130 min. All experiments were performed three times and data were analysed using ANOVA; statistical significance was verified using Tukey’s multiple comparisons test and results are expressed as the mean ± SEM (error bars); p < 0.05 was considered statistically significant
Mean temperature difference of each insulation system tested
| Insulation system | Initial mean water temperature ( | Final mean water temperature ( | Mean temperature difference ( |
|---|---|---|---|
| Control | 41.63 | 29.43 | 12.20 |
| Vacuum mattress and Pertex© blanket | 41.70 | 38.53 | 3.17 |
| Vacuum mattress, Pertex© blanket and Wiggy bag | 41.70 | 38.50 | 3.20 |
| Wiggy bag | 41.70 | 37.50 | 4.20 |
| ME casualty bag | 41.70 | 37.43 | 4.27 |
| Blizzard bag | 41.70 | 35.63 | 5.37 |
| Plastic orange survival bag | 41.70 | 32.17 | 9.53 |
Mass (kg) and initial purchase costs of each insulation system tested compared to the Ready-Heat II™ system
| Insulation system | Mass (kg) | Cost (£) |
|---|---|---|
| Vacuum mattress and Pertex© blanket | 8.5 | 662.00 |
| Wiggy bag | 4.5 | 250.00 |
| ME Casualty bag | 4.0 | 400.00 |
| Blizzard bag | 0.39 | 33.00 |
| Plastic orange survival bag | 0.27 | 2.99 |
| Twelve-panel Ready-Heat II™ system | 0.75 | 20.00 |