Hyperthermia Basics
Heat Emergencies
Hypothermia Basics
Cold Emergencies
The Call Nobody Wanted
100

What term means an abnormally high body temperature?

Hyperthermia

100

What environment increases heat illness risk the MOST: dry heat or humid heat?

Humid heat

100

What core temp defines hypothermia?

>95F

100

What is the most dangerous environmental factor that accelerates heat loss besides temperature?

Wind/wind chill

100

Dispatch reports “elderly female, no heat in the house for 3 days.” What environmental emergencies are most likely?

Hypothermia, dehydration

200

What heat illness is caused mainly by dehydration and electrolyte loss without altered mental status?

Heat exhaustion

200

What occupational group in CT has the highest heat stroke risk?

Construction / landscaping / athletics

200

What is the MOST common early sign of hypothermia?

Shivering

200

Why are intoxicated patients at extreme risk for hypothermia?

Alcohol causes vasodilation and blocks shivering

200

A snowmobiler was ejected and is laying still in sub-freezing temps. What kills them faster than bleeding?

Hypothermia

300

What heat emergency is immediately life-threatening and involves central nervous system dysfunction?

Heat stroke

300

What core temperature is commonly associated with heat stroke?

Greater than 104F

300

What happens to heart rate as core temp drops?

Bradycardia

300

What is the MOST common cause of hypothermia in Connecticut?

Prolonged cold exposure (wet & wind)

300

What is an example of an antipyretic?

Tylenol, Ibuprofen, Naproxen

400

What two body systems fail FIRST in heat stroke?

Neurological and cardiovascular

400

Why are elderly patients at higher risk for heat emergencies?

  • Decreased thirst response

  • Poor temperature regulation

  • Medications (diuretics, beta blockers)

400

True or False:

Hypothermia can exist even if the patient is indoors.

True.

400

What color change suggests worsening frostbite?

White → blue → black

400

A hypothermic patient is pulseless at 86°F. Do you terminate resuscitation on scene?

No — “not dead until warm and dead.” 

Continue CPR and transport.

500

True or False: A patient with heat stroke may still be sweating.

True (especially exertional heat stroke)

500

SCENARIO:

A 22-year-old collapses during football practice in August. Skin hot, HR 148, BP 88 systolic, confused. What FOUR actions must happen immediately?

  • Airway & high-flow O₂

  • Remove from heat

  • Aggressive cooling (ice packs/ice water)

  • Rapid transport

500

A homeless patient is found outdoors in January, cold to touch, confused, HR 38, BG 54. What THREE conditions are killing him right now?

  • Hypothermia

  • Hypoglycemia

  • Bradycardia

500

What medication effect increases hypothermia risk in elderly patients?

Beta blockers and sedatives blunt heat response

500

A hypothermic patient becomes suddenly pulseless during packaging. What likely caused this arrest?

Rough handling triggering ventricular fibrillation

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