Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
5563666 Wilderness & Environmental Medicine 2016 7 Pages PDF
Abstract
Medical care for over a century followed the how but not the why of treating frostbite and hypothermia slowly with snow or cold water rather than heat. There were 2 main reasons: First was a practical attempt to limit gangrene. Less known, and long forgotten, is a major rationale based on the erroneous theory of heat called “the caloric.” Because of these 2 reasons, the slow method of “cold warming” remained standard medical practice well into the 20th century. Although these recommendations are now known to be flawed, some of the reasons behind them will be discussed, along with early but correct observations on afterdrop and circumrescue collapse. There is a long backstory of treatment from 1812 to the present.
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