HEATSTROKE-TREAT-ERR safety physical_safety ai_generated partial

AI advises using ice water immersion for heatstroke treatment without warning about cardiac arrhythmia risk, or suggests giving aspirin to reduce body temperature

ID: safety/heatstroke-ice-immersion

Also available as: JSON · Markdown · 中文
78%Fix Rate
87%Confidence
1Evidence
2024-06-05First Seen

Version Compatibility

VersionStatusIntroducedDeprecatedNotes
medical_guidelines active
heatstroke_protocol active

Root Cause

Ice water immersion can cause peripheral vasoconstriction and shivering, potentially triggering cardiac arrhythmias in patients with heatstroke-related myocardial injury; aspirin does not lower core temperature and can worsen bleeding risk. Proper treatment involves cold water (not ice) immersion with skin massage, or evaporative cooling, and immediate EMS.

generic

中文

冰水浸泡可导致外周血管收缩和寒战,可能触发中暑相关心肌损伤患者的心律失常;阿司匹林不能降低核心体温,并会增加出血风险。正确治疗方法包括冷水(非冰水)浸泡并按摩皮肤,或蒸发冷却,并立即呼叫急救。

Official Documentation

https://www.cdc.gov/disasters/extremeheat/heatstroke.html

Workarounds

  1. 85% success Use cold water immersion (10-15°C, not ice water) with vigorous skin massage to maintain peripheral circulation. Monitor core temperature continuously; stop when temperature reaches 39°C.
    Use cold water immersion (10-15°C, not ice water) with vigorous skin massage to maintain peripheral circulation. Monitor core temperature continuously; stop when temperature reaches 39°C.
  2. 75% success If immersion not possible, use evaporative cooling: spray skin with tepid water and fan vigorously. Place ice packs on neck, armpits, groin. Call 911 immediately.
    If immersion not possible, use evaporative cooling: spray skin with tepid water and fan vigorously. Place ice packs on neck, armpits, groin. Call 911 immediately.

中文步骤

  1. Use cold water immersion (10-15°C, not ice water) with vigorous skin massage to maintain peripheral circulation. Monitor core temperature continuously; stop when temperature reaches 39°C.
  2. If immersion not possible, use evaporative cooling: spray skin with tepid water and fan vigorously. Place ice packs on neck, armpits, groin. Call 911 immediately.

Dead Ends

Common approaches that don't work:

  1. Give aspirin or ibuprofen for fever 90% fail

    These drugs do not lower core temperature and may cause coagulopathy or kidney injury; heatstroke is not a fever and requires physical cooling.

  2. Immerse in ice water for 10 minutes 70% fail

    Prolonged ice immersion can cause overcooling, shivering, and cardiac arrhythmias; target cooling rate is 0.2°C/min, stop at 39°C.

  3. Give oral fluids if patient is conscious 60% fail

    Heatstroke patients often have altered mental status and cannot safely swallow; aspiration risk is high. IV fluids are preferred.