How To Identify, Prevent and Treat Heatstroke - Doctor Mike Hansen

Поделиться
HTML-код
  • Опубликовано: 3 авг 2024
  • Heat stroke can occur suddenly, without any symptoms of heat exhaustion. If a person is experiencing any symptoms of heat exhaustion or heat stroke, GET MEDICAL CARE IMMEDIATELY.
    Depending on different factors, heat can cause someone to lose 1-2 liters of water through sweat. This is why the recommendations for hiking in peak daylight hours of the grand canyon during the summer, is to carry one to two liters for each hour on the trail, so that’s 8-16 pounds of water for a 4 hour trek.
    And if you’re not replenishing with enough water, dehydration kicks in, then overheating, meaning hyperthermia. At this point, the body is going to start to divert blood to the parts of the brain that are more basic. Which means other parts of the brain get less bloodflow, like the frontal lobe. Now your in heat stroke, and your capacity for decision making diminishes. And later, the delirium kicks in. Followed by crashing to the ground, and quickly dying, unless there is emergent medical attention.
    Her tragic death could have easily been prevented. But no one thinks they will ever suffer from heat stroke. But temperatures are climbing all over the globe, and you don’t have to be in desert summer heat to suffer from it. Especially now-a-days. Just recently, former NFL player Marion Barber died of heat stroke. And you have this 24 year old UPS driver who died of heat stroke. Thankfully,…….. this UPS driver survived.
    In the US, more than 600 people die from complications of extreme heat every year, and with global warming, that number is only going to get worse.
    What is Heat Stroke?
    The diagnosis of Heat stroke can be made when you have 3 things
    1) You’re out in the heat
    2) You have elevated core body temperature, usually in excess of 40.5°C (105°F)
    3) Your brain is malfunctioning
    The scary thing with heat stroke that really blows my mind, besides it often being fatal, is that it can happen so quickly. In some cases, only 15 minutes. There are two types of heat stroke:There’s the classic heat stroke - aka Nonexertional heat stroke. This is the one that occurs in people who are predisposed to having difficulty regulating their temperature. Who would be more likely to have more difficulty regulating their temperature?
    People at the extremes of age, or with certain medical conditions like heart disease, neurologic or psychiatric disorders, obesity, and the use of alcohol or cocaine, as well as certain prescription medications. Then there is exertional heat stroke, which usually occurs in young, otherwise healthy people who exercise in hot temperatures for too long. Typically athletes and military recruits in basic training.
    How can you tell if someone is having a heat stroke? Besides being hot, heat stroke patients are breathing fast, have a fast heart rate, and typically a low blood pressure. The brain is affecting in some way. It might be something as mild as feeling weak and tired, but there can also be nausea, vomiting, and dizziness. There can be confusion, slurred speech, disorientation, delirium, and if extreme, loss of consciousness, along with seizures and coma. The skin usually has flushing, from the cutaneous vasodilation. And the skin may be moist or dry depending upon underlying medical conditions and hydration status. I should say that most but not all victims of heat stroke are dehydrated.
    Let’s say you come across someone who is suffering from heat stroke. What should you do?
    1) call 911
    2) Stay with them until emergency medical services arrive
    3) Move them to a shaded, cooler area
    4) remove outer clothing
    5) if they are able, drink cold water
    6) cool them as quickly as possible
    o ideally with a cold water or ice bath
    o Wet the skin
    o Place cold wet cloths on the skin
    o Soak clothing with cool water
    o Place cold wet cloths or ice on the head, neck, armpits, and groin
    7) Fan them to circulate the air around the worker to speed cooling.
    How is heat stroke prevented?
    1. avoid outdoor activity during peak hours of the day (10 am to 4 pm)
    2. Drink plenty of cool fluids, such as water or sports drinks, so you do not feel thirsty. But don't force yourself to drink very large amounts of water in a short time to the point that you feel uncomfortable, because this can be harmful. *Sometimes people drink too much water, without consuming enough salt, which can lead to water intoxication. The medical term is hyponatremia, and when this happens, you can feel very tired and weak, confused, and in extreme cases, experience coma and death.
    3. Avoid diuretics (alcohol, caffeine, medications, drugs)
    4. Wear loose, light-fitting clothing. Don’t forget sunscreen.
    5. Wear White colors to help to reflect the sunlight off you
    6. If you need to be outdoors, consider getting a cooling vest
    #heatwaves #heatstroke #health
    0:00-0:25 Intro Heat Stroke
    0:25-1:22 Heat Stroke
    1:22-2:10 Dehydration and Heat Stroke
    2:10-2:31 What is Heat Stroke?
    2:31-3:15 Type of Heat Stroke
    3:1-4:31 Symptoms of heat stroke
    4:31-6:42 Prevention

Комментарии • 171

  • @GhostOnTheHalfShell
    @GhostOnTheHalfShell 2 года назад +14

    Heat stroke is no joke. Decades ago as a teen in a hiking summer camp, we had one group member 17 years of age collapse on an exposed ridge because he didn’t want to drink water. He was somewhere between exhaustion and stoke. He had to be tended for a few hours until he was cooled and rehydrated. It wrecked our ability to reach the night’s campsite.

  • @GirlWanderDownUnder
    @GirlWanderDownUnder 2 года назад +17

    This is a huge problem in Australia also. With our summer temperatures sometimes reaching past 40ºC (104ºF) during the day. Some of the worst days I've experienced have actually reached over 120ºF; these are definitely not the conditions you want to be outside in.

  • @marygem
    @marygem 2 года назад +14

    If you find someone suffering from heat, you must become proactive to cool them down. Throw them in a shower, get ice on them, anything to cool them! They can't think.

    • @flagmichael
      @flagmichael 2 года назад +5

      Good advice! They will recover from getting wet, but may not recover from heat stroke. As you say, people getting close to the edge will not think straight. Before I retired from an Arizona electric company a line crew noticed three young adults walking across a field in Phoenix... one of them was stumbling noticeably. The one who was stumbling refused all help until a lineman offered him a couple of bucks to drink a bottle of water. After he drank the first one (and the linemen had set up portable shade) he accepted two more. By then he was alert and able to see to his own needs. I have no doubt he would have come to tragedy in a few minutes without their intervention.

    • @comedianmattrossey
      @comedianmattrossey 2 года назад +2

      @@flagmichael Good on your crewman, he deserves to be honored in some way for what he did. He probably saved the guys life

  • @lizziesangi1602
    @lizziesangi1602 2 года назад +2

    One summer job I had the worst job of my life, assorting hangers in a Korvettes' warehouse. We stood in front of a table and assorted different sized hangers for 8 hours. There were 2 fans blowing on the workers, (women).
    I got heat prostration and was out for two weeks. It was bad. We had no AC at home, was in bed for two weeks and that probably could have been averted had I drank water. But this was in 1974 and sadly and unfortunately drinking water was not promoted as it is today.
    Thanks, DR HANSEN
    Shared!

  • @michaelmerenda3158
    @michaelmerenda3158 2 года назад +5

    Thank you Doctor Mike, this is a scary problem all of us have to deal with!

  • @LFTRnow
    @LFTRnow 2 года назад +12

    Very good info overall. I'd add that it doesn't have to be an "ice" bath. Short answer: A bath of any water or a shower of any water will generally offer considerable improvement.
    Usually simple "cold" water, even if it is 35C/95F will do a lot to improve conditions. Water conducts heat extremely well and doesn't heat up very much when doing so. Also, when water evaporates (both coming out of the shower head as well as off of you) it cools a bit further, giving you an even lower temperature to work with. It is also far less of a shock to the body if you can use gentler temperatures. Obviously, water that is warmer than the patient will do little to help, though it can be applied to give evaporative cooling (ie sponge baths. If doing this, use a fan if possible to aid evaporation..

    • @comedianmattrossey
      @comedianmattrossey 2 года назад

      Dr. Hansen, DR. HANSEN, did advise of all that. And your medical training to try and come off like you know more and to give direction to a DR's video is?

  • @user-yg7ps4gh1x
    @user-yg7ps4gh1x 2 года назад +16

    I grew up outside of Tucson Arizona on a ranch. Summer heat can reach 118 degrees. There are basic rules to follow. There you learn to drink every time your mind thinks about water. You don’t wait for your body to tell you are thirsty because that is too late. The second thing you learn is to stay covered- wear clothes to protect you from the sun. Your perspiration will collect in the fabric and cool your body. And the third thing is to avoid drinks with alcohol. Alcohol pulls the liquid out of your body.

    • @flagmichael
      @flagmichael 2 года назад +1

      Great point - if you think about water you need it.

    • @lizziesangi1602
      @lizziesangi1602 2 года назад

      The clothes absorb the bodily sweat and cools the body?
      Never have I heard that but find it fascinating. Thinking about it, the clothes do dry fast enough on the body - it's not like they remain wet causing the body to become cold, (even in the heat we don't want a cold body), and sticky. I will never think the same about sweating up a storm, again 😂
      Thank you

    • @OrlandoAponte
      @OrlandoAponte 2 года назад +2

      @@lizziesangi1602 You never noticed that desert-faring people (i.e., people in the middle east) wear garbs that cover their entire bodies, in spite of the heat?

    • @LeTrashPanda
      @LeTrashPanda 2 года назад +1

      Never drive anywhere without at least a gallon of potable water, preferably more. Learned that one the hard way....

  • @gabrielhung1647
    @gabrielhung1647 2 года назад +7

    Thank you Dr. Hansen, this is a nice topic for the recently heat waves attached the globe. We have to aware of the heat stroke.

  • @annatirindelli8879
    @annatirindelli8879 2 года назад +4

    Già....il super caldo c' è sempre stato, ma è la durata che è diversa... Con il "siero magico" nelle vene c'è chi sente un vero "fuoco" interno, come abbiamo potuto sapere, forse ora ulteriormente aggravato da queste temperature record....Cordiali saluti dall' Italia 👋🏻👋🏻🙏🙏💖💖

  • @12hunter100
    @12hunter100 2 года назад +18

    When I'm out doing deliverys and the heat catches up to me I try to hurry home, I don't have a air conditioner, sometimes feel like almost dizzy not thinking right and I'm having anxiety about the heat so I have ice water that I'm drinking and pouring on my neck , face legs arms , I also have a large thermos of ice and extra water and I'm trying to hurry back home

    • @rebahensley5323
      @rebahensley5323 2 года назад +2

      A window unit at walmart can be bought for less than 150$ also, fire departments sometimes loan them. Ask around.

    • @alisonburgess345
      @alisonburgess345 2 года назад +2

      Have a cool shower when you get home too.

    • @stanj7223
      @stanj7223 2 года назад +6

      I freeze a 16oz/500ml bottle of water (or larger) and then hold it between my thighs while driving. It cools the femoral arteries directly. Make sure you're wearing pants, or you'll get frostbite! One or two layers of dish towel will work as well as jeans.

    • @lizziesangi1602
      @lizziesangi1602 2 года назад

      @ i rivas
      Two days ago, at Walmart there were Air Conditioners for $55 and small units I'm not familiar with for $44. PLEASE, get yourself an Air Conditioner. It's not worth it. My AC broke earlier this summer and it was like 100° in one room. You can die. With energy savers, you being out all day, you CAN effectively keep the monthly electric down. Please, get yourself an AC, you deserve it! Why don't you deserve an Air Conditioner? There's an heat advisory where I live this week - 95 - 105°, 90 - 100°, that's not real feel. The heat is no joke, as you're experiencing!
      Please, get yourself an AC ❤

  • @kenfine1469
    @kenfine1469 2 года назад +3

    Your videos have achieved a new level of excellence. They are entirely informative and to-the-point. You've hit your stride!

    • @lizziesangi1602
      @lizziesangi1602 2 года назад +1

      The very reasons I subscribed to Dr Hansen! Concise, to the point, no BS.

    • @comedianmattrossey
      @comedianmattrossey 2 года назад

      @@lizziesangi1602 Same

  • @JC-vj9to
    @JC-vj9to 2 года назад +3

    Thanks, Dr. Hansen, for another spot on informative video. You are appreciated! !☮️

  • @IamLinda_
    @IamLinda_ 2 года назад +2

    I just had a situation with my 4 year old grandson. We went to the NASCAR race at Pocono Raceway a couple of weeks ago. I brought a lot of ice water and frozen Gatorade with us because I knew it was going to be extremely hot there. I also brought a thermometer. It was 100.8° in our seats. My grandson got quiet and wanted to go home. I noticed that his face was red and he wasn't sweating. I immediately started pouring the ice water on him and after a few minutes he was back to his normal self and his face wasn't red anymore.

  • @PlumBerryCherries
    @PlumBerryCherries 2 года назад

    You are the first Doctor to address Drinking Too Much water. Thank you for that. Great Video.

  • @Lilafay180
    @Lilafay180 2 года назад +3

    Thank you for this video, it is an important one!

  • @walkerpantera
    @walkerpantera 2 года назад +1

    whew! even when u look tired you're fine. I just finished cutting a half acre with a push mower in 85° humid morning heat, im 54 in great shape on modified keto. I worried a little but I sweat alot, I drink ice water, im taking my time, and im breathing normally. i also started at 8am and was done by 10am. thanks for this info doc.

  • @RichRich1955
    @RichRich1955 2 года назад +5

    Heat exhaustion happens when the body is overheated, usually with a fever of up to 104 degrees Fahrenheit. One of the differences in symptoms between heat exhaustion and heatstroke is sweat; heat exhaustion is characterized by heavy sweating, while those suffering from heatstroke experience decreased sweating

    • @lizziesangi1602
      @lizziesangi1602 2 года назад +1

      Heat "prostration" - was what I had and there was little to no sweating and yes, fever. Two weeks were spent in bed. It was bad.

  • @vsrump
    @vsrump 2 года назад +7

    Great informative video , thank you .
    Sympathies to the families of the young people who succumbed ..😢

  • @AllToDevNull
    @AllToDevNull 2 года назад +2

    Exposure to wet-bulb temperatures of 35 °C or higher over 3-4 hours can result in multiple organ failures and death. The wet-bulb temperature is the one under a wet fabric, so it includes any heat removed by sweating or any form of evaporation. Those temperature are now reached in certain parts of the world from time to time and leaving the cooled areas is a serious health risk.

  • @modemmack
    @modemmack 2 года назад +4

    I've found a very effective way to keep heatstroke at bay. For about 10 years now, I've used a water-soaked mid-sized terry cloth towel wrapped around my neck and/or head. The constant evaporation effect makes you head and neck feel wonderful. The cooling effect appears to cool my blood. I stop sweating as much overall and get to carry way less water while doing activities like working out outside in 100+ degree weather (which I do 😊). Before I started doing this, I did have times when I did get dangerously close to getting heat stroke. After wrapping my head and neck in a soaked towel, I've not come close to it under very extreme temperatures.

    • @flagmichael
      @flagmichael 2 года назад

      I soaked my riding shirt before I left work for the six mile ride home in Phoenix. The front was dry within a mile and the back within another mile. but every bit helps.

    • @modemmack
      @modemmack 2 года назад

      @@flagmichael Next time, try a terry cloth towel. One that's small enough to just wrap around your neck or head. It takes longer for all the water to evaporate.

  • @placidojr.menaje4067
    @placidojr.menaje4067 2 года назад

    Thank you Dr. Mike.

  • @onix249
    @onix249 2 года назад

    Thank you so much doctor for this information it's very helpful these days 😊😊😊

  • @vannadang6868
    @vannadang6868 2 года назад +1

    Thank you! Very informative.

  • @johnedwards315
    @johnedwards315 2 года назад +4

    what a relief! Getting back to learning things.
    Had all these symptoms today living in southern peloponnese. I need to take diuretics because of a previous stroke and I am a coffee lover. Difficult equation with far too many variables.
    Solution. jumping in the sea with a telephone in a waterproof case 😂. Did the trick though.
    Thanks for dropping those Med cooking atrocities. Can send you a bottle of my olive oil to see what is all about. Keep it coming.

    • @comedianmattrossey
      @comedianmattrossey 2 года назад

      Kick the love of coffee my friend. If you're living there full time, the heat alone for your condition isn't gonna be a good thing. Why add to the risks. There are other things you can drink similar to coffee that don't have the caffeine, Chag. It's a fungus that grown on trees. Much healthier than coffee is and same kind of enjoyment. Hope you have health insurance there.

    • @johnedwards315
      @johnedwards315 2 года назад

      thanks for your advice.

  • @MaxwellsUnearthly
    @MaxwellsUnearthly 2 года назад +8

    No joke, I remember I almost died in Bryce canyon trailing for 7 miles with only 16 oz of water up and down elevations of 8,000 feet. I was very lucky. Just in that hike alone, I lost 7 lbs of water weight. It was very hot, like 104 degrees that day. Travel with plenty of water, don't cut corners to pack light, you never know what might happen and you need that extra water.

    • @flagmichael
      @flagmichael 2 года назад

      Lucky indeed! You lost almost two gallons and lived to tell about it.

    • @shootingbricks8554
      @shootingbricks8554 2 года назад

      I carry at least 2 Liters on 7 miles or shorter.

  • @clairressagoad2789
    @clairressagoad2789 2 года назад

    Very informative thank you…

  • @ashutosh1269
    @ashutosh1269 2 года назад

    Great work

  • @brentclayton6894
    @brentclayton6894 2 года назад

    Thanks Dr. MIKE!

  • @loopylynda1974
    @loopylynda1974 2 года назад +1

    Thank you. I work for a nonprofit and our Warehouse in TX is not air-conditioned & our folks are getting way to hot. Appreciate the info.

  • @nicolacoke7538
    @nicolacoke7538 2 года назад +3

    Grand Canyon is different kind a heat , true agree with you Dr, heat stroke can be fatal

    • @flagmichael
      @flagmichael 2 года назад +1

      One of the wicked thing about the Canyon is that temperatures at the top can be near 80F while temperatures a mile down can approach 120F. I think the relatively low rate of heat emergencies is that most people who decide to hike the Canyon (it's a round trip, after all) are experienced.

    • @nicolacoke7538
      @nicolacoke7538 2 года назад

      @@flagmichael agree air sinks at lower elevation ,as the air is compressed, becomes warmer,Thank you 👍

  • @randallthomas5207
    @randallthomas5207 2 года назад +1

    I ran Cross Country in Las Vegas. I was loosing 8 to 10-pounds of water every afternoon. A friend from the team was taking exercise physiology. I ended up running on treadmills with probes all over me, so the folks in the research lab could observe what was happening.

  • @Hack_The_Planet_
    @Hack_The_Planet_ 2 года назад

    I’m really worried I did damage to my brain, I wish this guy actually addressed the brain aspect of heat stroke more. I desire clarity

  • @brendakrieger7000
    @brendakrieger7000 2 года назад

    Thank you very much! I'm diabetic and prone to dehydration.

  • @patrickfahey7159
    @patrickfahey7159 Год назад

    Good video. I really don't hear about heatstroke that much, still a serious medical related condition to not want to endure.

  • @lettienugent
    @lettienugent 2 года назад

    Thanks!

  • @edwing7412
    @edwing7412 2 года назад

    On Wednesday I almost collapsed..
    I went for a ride on my bicycle suddenly I started sweeting a lot with vomiting symptoms I got scared..
    I stopped and talked refugee on one tree shape.
    I knew it..
    Heat stroke..!
    Thanks Dr..
    Blessings to you

  • @jackiecosta7620
    @jackiecosta7620 2 года назад +2

    Thanks for discussing heat stroke…
    please consider a video all about salt.
    Iodized table salt vs non iodized …
    how much iodine do we need daily …
    I heard Celtic salt is better as well as pink hymalayian salts …
    then the 2300 mg of salt a day limit topic … how can it be achieved if at all?
    and lastly … how does our salt consumption vs water intake both alone and with our food choices effect
    the body s ability to avoid heat stroke.
    one more thing … sweating …
    some people do not sweat … still another variable …
    ps there are lots of no salt added products out there now which I am finding helpful…

    • @stanj7223
      @stanj7223 2 года назад

      Plain old sea salt works fine, or Redmond Real Salt. Some of the pink 'Himalayan' salt is mined using (basically) forced labor, so I won't buy it or support it. One benefit of sea salts is it's a mix of metallic salts that are nearly identical to your blood concentrations, as opposed to sodium chloride 'table salt'. Most people get too much sodium and not nearly enough potassium.

  • @nicst3373
    @nicst3373 2 года назад

    Thx for the tips
    I bought UV shield sleeves n face shield for my day cycling trips

  • @NurseSteve
    @NurseSteve 2 года назад

    Thank u I’m very sensitive to the heat

  • @wolfmother369
    @wolfmother369 2 года назад +4

    This goes for our ANIMALS as well. 🐕🦮🐈‍⬛🐩🐇🐈

  • @b_uppy
    @b_uppy 2 года назад +1

    Gee most of the country just finished heat waves, as well as Europe.
    Great timing...

  • @qtzt8278
    @qtzt8278 2 года назад +3

    Simple ..direct info 👍🏻👍🏻
    Thanks sir for sharing these with us especially when our world facing uncertain climate changing.

  • @jasonhsu4711
    @jasonhsu4711 2 года назад +5

    Is it just me, or is excessive use of air conditioning more common now compared to when I was a child in the 1970s and 1980s? So many buildings are kept so cold in summer that I have to put on a light jacket while inside. There's a defacto dress code that's at odds with the weather outside.
    I can't help but think that air conditioning abuse INCREASES the risk of heatstroke by reducing adaptation to the heat. Admittedly, 100-degree heat is potentially dangerous for everyone. However, it seems to me that the people who keep their thermostats at 72 degrees or less during air conditioning season are at more risk because they have no adaptation to the heat. 100 degrees to someone who's used to 72 is like 108 degrees to someone who's used to 80 degrees.

    • @pualenaisz4403
      @pualenaisz4403 2 года назад +1

      Jason Hsu, what would be the ideal AC setting? I have an visitor who thinks I need to have my AC at 75 degrees as the highest, and 69 as the lowest. Since she's just visiting and doesn't pay the bills, we keep it at 78 downstairs and 77 upstairs. I'm in Texas where we're still experiencing 3 digit temps.

    • @jasonhsu4711
      @jasonhsu4711 2 года назад

      @@pualenaisz4403 I live in the Twin Cities, MN, and my idea of room temperature during the height of air conditioning season is 80 degrees. So I'm surprised that your idea of room temperature isn't more like 82 to 85 degrees. (Also, I only use the air conditioning in the evening and at night and use a timer on the window unit I rely on.)
      Given that I'm in summer mode, 69 degrees would be bone chilling to me. I'd definitely need a jacket at that temperature. Where is this visitor from? Somewhere north of the Arctic Circle?
      100-degree heat is ideal weather for watching movies featuring lots of snow and ice. So if you've been meaning to watch _Dr. Zhivago_, _Frozen_, _New In Town_, or _March of the Penguins_, now is the time to do so.

    • @pualenaisz4403
      @pualenaisz4403 2 года назад

      @ Jason Hsu, My visitor lives here, but I refuse to turn AC down even a smidgen. We had it at 80 when it went out. So for the " elderly " that's not feasible. Remember, in South, we don't experience much cold temps, except for a few record cold fronts.
      We are complying with local public service to keep it at levels they recommend. TY , we're 💯 good here!

    • @jasonhsu4711
      @jasonhsu4711 2 года назад +1

      @@pualenaisz4403 Wow, it sounds like your home is extremely well shaded and insulated if the indoor temperature topped out at only 80 degrees when the air conditioning broke. I would have expected the indoor temperature to climb at least into the upper 80s without the aid of air conditioning.
      I'd expect people in Texas to be well-adapted to the heat and have a level of heat tolerance that's superior to mine. Admittedly, I'm skinnier than most of the population, but my idea of room temperature in winter is down in the mid/upper 50s. (You can bet I'm wearing a sweater and long johns in deep winter.) I'm enough of a couch potato as it is in winter. If I insisted on a 72-degree indoor temperature in winter, I'd have difficulty adapting to the cold, and that would make the outdoor environment even more hostile. Having an aversion to the great outdoors can only make it more difficult to get enough exercise. I need more exercise during the warmer months to compensate for my sedentary winter lifestyle.
      How can your human polar bear visitor stand to live in Texas? It sounds like he/she cannot spend more than a few minutes outside even in normal summer weather. How can he/she ever go for a walk, visit an amusement park, go to an outdoor concert, or go to a summer festival?

    •  2 года назад +1

      It isn’t only the generalized use and abuse of AC. It has also to do with poor dietary choices (particularly, high consumption of salt/sodium and low consumption of potassium), avoidance of prolonged physical activity at warm temperatures, low aerobic capacity, overweight bodies, etc.

  • @ejwis1
    @ejwis1 2 года назад +1

    We hike all the time and I’ve always had a hard time with temperature regulation because I sweat very little. I’ve learned to wear a hat and take frozen bottle water with me. I put it on my head and neck to help. My husband watches my face if it turns blood red which it does all the time. He makes me rest. I can’t tell when I’m overheated.

  • @lilshaz8378
    @lilshaz8378 2 года назад

    My postal career ended due to heat exhaustion. My feet and hands went numb and I couldn't move. A medical student found me and called for help stating it seemed I was suffering from Paresthesia. Got fluids in the ER and Dr told me my electrolytes were off.
    Now anytime I'm out in the heat and if I haven't drank enough fluids, I get nauseous, my hands start tingling and cramping, and I just know my feet will go numb next.
    The experience also exacerbated my nightime restless legs.
    It's been 6 yrs. You know how hard it is to stay out of the heat in Southern CA? Lol

  • @Veri85
    @Veri85 2 года назад +2

    Very good information, thank you Dr. Mike 👍

  • @tombirney7276
    @tombirney7276 2 года назад

    ARMY assigned me 2 Kuwaiti officers to my platoon. August in Washington DC. They wore flimsy white head gear that covered top of head and back of the neck. Absorbent under layer over flowing white sheets.

  • @denismeans2910
    @denismeans2910 2 года назад +3

    Heat related illness is far more likely today than in the not so distant past, particularly when most of our activities take place during the peak heat times of the day. We may need to rethink our work schedules for health and environmental reasons. Running AC and vehicles during peak heat hours only exacerbates the problem.

    • @comedianmattrossey
      @comedianmattrossey 2 года назад +1

      Yup it does. And there are other ways we can use that also cool the indoor air just as effectively, without the need to use aircon or electricity. They take more to set up but once installed, they can work indefinitely in a natural way. People living in desserts have used environmental cooling for centuries to great effect. No reason why the rest of the world can't do the same.

    • @denismeans2910
      @denismeans2910 2 года назад +2

      @@comedianmattrossey Adobe makes an excellent insulator against heat and cold. Middle Eastern countries have homes hundreds of years old. In the US, the Pueblo and Navaho tribes still live in adobe homes. Adobe is durable and is good for the
      environment.

    • @comedianmattrossey
      @comedianmattrossey 2 года назад +1

      @@denismeans2910 That would be one of the many things I was thinking about when writing the reply. I didn't honestly say any in particular as there are so many different ways to accomplish cooling spaces down without the use of electricty and by doing it environmentally. I totally agree with you on adobe built homes. They are even good in cold climates for retaining heat in. I've got a friend who built and owns an earthship home and he has wind tunnels that cause a constant movement of warm air being expelled out of his home to the outside and it draws cool air in from the dark side of the house. I've been there and it works really well. He doesn't have to worry about heating the place so much but on the cold nights in the arid area he lives in the Nevada desert, he just closes the vents with a hand crank and lights the fireplace and the whole house is evenly warmed. He's got it down to a science.

    • @comedianmattrossey
      @comedianmattrossey 2 года назад +1

      @@denismeans2910 Yup it does. I believe I made a comment that you may have quoted part of what I said in this comment. And yes I agree about the practical use of Adobe for homes. Adobe is also used in Africa, Australia, and a number of other countries, by Indigenous People for 1000's of years. There have even been Adobe structures unearthed during archeological digs of early human homes.
      Earth Ship homes most times are partially made of adobe. They're countless other old world building methods that are still used currently by people in different countries. In the Philippines people still live in Nipa Huts in areas that are far from cities and are more rural/country areas. Thailand, Vietnam, and the Philippines, again in the more rural areas, use bamboo for the entire building of full houses, including the furniture. They even use it for plumbing fresh water from a river to a bamboo hut.

    • @100madmic
      @100madmic Год назад +1

      in Nevada we do have air condition but we also have swamp cooler that work great. I think when I first moved to Nevada I think I ended up getting heat exhaustion or close to it but made it home quickly enough and stayed by the swamp cooler. but now I have cooling towel to help me outside for work.

  • @Stardust...4445
    @Stardust...4445 2 года назад +5

    How to avoid panic...??

  • @eelkeaptroot1393
    @eelkeaptroot1393 2 года назад

    Thanks doc! Gaterade can have a medical application, that's news...

  • @devintaylor8702
    @devintaylor8702 2 года назад +1

    Thank you for sharing this Life saving information I will be more aware of this when I'm outside from now on 🙂

  • @michealsmith28
    @michealsmith28 2 года назад +1

    What, 😲 I want to go with that was it on the news that is a shock 😭🤧

  • @davidr9876
    @davidr9876 2 года назад +3

    You need to acclimate yourself to heat, it takes a few weeks. Also, I read that many people who were force-feeding themselves water, trying to protect against heat stroke, actually make themselves more susceptible.

    • @flagmichael
      @flagmichael 2 года назад +1

      Acclimatization is much more mental than physical. The requirement of water in hot climates is everything. The only caveat about consuming lots of water is to include electrolytes; without it we invite heat exhaustion (very different from heat stroke) but if we fail to drink the water we invite heat stroke. Drink the water; the outcome of heat exhaustion is almost always a lot better than the outcome of heat stroke. (Lived, worked, and cycled in Phoenix for 27 years.)

    • @davidr9876
      @davidr9876 2 года назад +1

      @@flagmichael I beleive your body actually reacts differently to heat after acclimation. I live in MD where we have 4 seasons and also did triathlons here. When summer heat comes, it hits you hard at first but after 2 or 3 weeks it's much easier to stand.
      There was a study (that I can't source) that looked at the number of people needing ambulances at 10k races, bike races etc. These are people like myself that are not true athletes, mostly weekend warriors. They determined that when people forced themselves to over drink in preparation for the event, they were more likely to need medical intervention (probably heat exhaustion as you say) than those that drank when they felt thirsty.

    •  2 года назад +2

      A high-sodium diet impairs heat acclimation. Heat acclimation has nothing of “mental” but rather is driven by adaptive physiological changes such as the hypertrophy of the eccrine sweat glands, an enhanced capacity to sweat, an increase in the re-uptake of sodium (aldosterone-mediated) and other ions from the filtrate in sweat glands and kidneys, etc.
      I’ve lived without AC in a warm climate with high relative humidity (on the Mediterranean coast) for almost five decades.

  • @wolfmother369
    @wolfmother369 2 года назад +1

    Very informative information. Thank you, Dr. Hansen. ☀️💙

  • @MarkSmith-ym5td
    @MarkSmith-ym5td 2 года назад

    Hey Doctor Mike. When are you going to present on the dramatic increase in all cause mortality?

  • @rogerdickinson920
    @rogerdickinson920 2 года назад

    Good vid, I survived Covid now it's heat related issues.

  • @randallthomas5207
    @randallthomas5207 2 года назад +1

    I am now work for a Federal Agency which fights wildland fires. Rahbdo is a serious issue with several people getting it every season. I keep trying to get them to ban energy drinks, which are high in caffeine and other stimulants, which in general are diuretics. They keep supplying them in fire camp.

    • @stanj7223
      @stanj7223 2 года назад

      Pedialyte is a great choice, but the 'manly' fools won't drink it. Gatorade is too strong, and it's best to cut it 50% with water.

    • @randallthomas5207
      @randallthomas5207 2 года назад

      @@stanj7223 Mid 70s, when I was running in College, there was a “sports drink”, marketed as “Gluconade ERG”. It was an electrolyte replaced with glucose, which was lemon flavored, glucose sweetened, and and contained a proportioned blend of electrolytes.
      The first time I came across it, was at the finish line of an AAU, half marathon. I finished and they had tables of 8-oz glasses set up. It was fall in Vegas, but still 90-degrees out, and I was dehydrated. I was half way through the fourth glass, when it suddenly tasted like lemonade with salt in it, and I made a sour face. The guy from the company laughed and told me that it was a design feature. When your fluids and electrolytes came back up, it suddenly tasted bad. That way you didn’t drink too much and flounder. It was only on the market for a year or two. Gatorade was much cheaper, and tasted better.

  • @catherinealexander2442
    @catherinealexander2442 2 года назад +2

    This happened to me years ago but I was drinking gator aide but that’s a Nono and water is what you need to much gator aid is not good

    • @flagmichael
      @flagmichael 2 года назад +1

      Some of both is good. You don't need much electrolyte addition but you do need a lot of water.

  • @kristie-leecorney7388
    @kristie-leecorney7388 2 года назад

    Hello if hypo Nigeria consist of other symptoms of feeling nausea , maybe you have found out why I feel the way I do when I drink water......
    Thank you for the video

  • @flagmichael
    @flagmichael 2 года назад +1

    Drink lots of water before you need it, and include some electrolytes (I learned that the hard way - 3 quarts of water but no pee, and I was getting more and more fatigued.) There is no substitute. When I lived in Phoenix a cyclist suffered heat stroke a couple blocks from my house. He was in the shade of a tree when EMS showed up; they were beginning to get his story when his temperature spiked and he died in front of them.
    Be aware that a lot of incipient victims will resist suggestions that will save their lives. You can't go against their wishes when it comes to their body or actions but you certainly can and should call 911 to get the professionals involved.

  • @briangriffiths114
    @briangriffiths114 2 года назад +2

    Very useful information given that when I was studying climate change 12 years ago, it was expected that it would take several decades for the planet to heat up by an additional half a degree. Instead, this has happened in only ten years.

  • @RichRich1955
    @RichRich1955 2 года назад

    I laid in the sun 15mins on both sides in 80f. My body temp went up 2.5f to 99f.

  • @gitmoholliday5764
    @gitmoholliday5764 2 года назад +1

    whow... just at the end some warning about Water poisoning.
    distrust everybody telling you to drink 2 liter of water
    without also telling you to refill on electrolytes / vitamins etc..

  • @MsOhsusanna
    @MsOhsusanna 2 года назад

    Have sjogrens. Is there any way to lessen heat intolerance?

  • @Jo-ys5le
    @Jo-ys5le 2 года назад +2

    How many of these had the "you know what". Could the blood clot increase have something to do with it also?

  • @polyanthesis
    @polyanthesis 2 года назад

    I had heat stroke as a child and I still have trouble with heat 30 years later.
    I need to take electrolytes all summer.

  • @nicolacoke7538
    @nicolacoke7538 2 года назад +1

    Very important Topic , Child died in Canada from heat stroke, child among lot of people, of a gathering, even though the child was in a stroller, hydrating, wear hat , seek shade , periodically, for me know the signs of heat stroke

  • @buzzman4860
    @buzzman4860 2 года назад +2

    The longer you are out the more water per hour you will need. A 5 hour event needs more water per hour than an1 hour event.

  • @LuckyNikitaBoba
    @LuckyNikitaBoba 2 года назад

    This is scary because it's hard to recognize the signs.

  • @Ash1965..
    @Ash1965.. 2 года назад

    Watch Sam Bailey

  • @emily91303
    @emily91303 11 месяцев назад

    I almost 😅 died of heat stroke 🥵 at the park after walking 🚶‍♀️ past two mechanics 🧰 which caused my heat stroke 🥵 to increase.

  • @ptg6202
    @ptg6202 11 месяцев назад

    So how does this differ from heat exhaustion because it sounds the same...

  • @zoeydeu2261
    @zoeydeu2261 2 года назад +1

    Since most of us will experience heatwaves thanks to climate change, this will be handy to know. Thanks Dr Mike 👍🏼

  • @Reaper6x8125
    @Reaper6x8125 2 года назад

    Is heat stroke the same as getting sick from the heat ?

    • @flagmichael
      @flagmichael 2 года назад +2

      Getting _really_ sick from heat is usually heat exhaustion - flushed face and serious fatigue. Getting sick from heat can be a number of things, including loss of electrolytes through sweating. Heat stroke is a medical emergency but any debilitating condition should be checked out by professionals. Heart attacks can hide under cover of heat exhaustion.

  • @RichRich1955
    @RichRich1955 2 года назад

    Heat stroke results in runaway body temp yikes.

  • @gunawathiheerath8095
    @gunawathiheerath8095 6 месяцев назад

  • @carlosm9111
    @carlosm9111 2 года назад

    Why no mention of electrolytes? Filtered water doesn’t hydrate you …

  • @glorialabella6361
    @glorialabella6361 2 года назад

    Hot 🥵 topic!

  • @joha7484
    @joha7484 2 года назад

    ❤❤❤

  • @vivianrios6007
    @vivianrios6007 2 года назад

    🤯😓🙏🏼

  • @immortalsofar7977
    @immortalsofar7977 2 года назад +4

    According to modeling, the increase in temperature due to climate change is only ~2C over the next 50 years. So, don't blame this on climate change, but rather weather.

    • @flagmichael
      @flagmichael 2 года назад

      Most land is under the influence of oceans. In North America the West is dominated by El Niño, a weather system driven by South Pacific currents. Here in Arizona it is King. While people were blaming the dry weather on climate change El Niño brought enormous amounts of water from the Sea of Cortez last week and dumped almost ten inches of rain on forest burn scars north of Flagstaff, causing massive mud flows. In East Flagstaff we barely had three inches of rain that week.

  • @Fiawordweaver
    @Fiawordweaver 2 года назад

    Important reminder with the heat increase across the planet. Thank you.

  • @MJA5
    @MJA5 2 года назад +14

    let's stack up the number of young people dying from heatstroke to those that just happen to, well, drop dead, which seems to be happening an awful lot lately. Five or six young doctors died in Canada in July, not exactly the hottest place on earth. Something else is going on, but you surely won't hear about it here.

    • @Jo-ys5le
      @Jo-ys5le 2 года назад +2

      The 5 to 6 doctors were from the same healthcare. They may have had a bad lot. I read it was the 4th "you know what" to get ready for the next pandemic. What makes me sad is the number of babies that are being born without limbs.

    • @RichRich1955
      @RichRich1955 2 года назад

      @@theinternetelectrician it was the heat. Ya ya. It was a vaccine ya that was it. It was cardiac arrest ya that was it.

    • @foobar6846
      @foobar6846 2 года назад

      Ah, yes, doctors are hiding a conspiracy that is killing them. Makes total sense. How deep down the rabbit hole do you have to be to belive this?

  • @malang73
    @malang73 2 года назад

    Even with wide brim hat?

  • @rhondanighman
    @rhondanighman 2 года назад

    Not just water ..get your electrolytes

  • @nosuchthing8
    @nosuchthing8 2 года назад +2

    105 degrees temp. Don't run in that weather.

    •  2 года назад

      Some of the people who swim in the sea, lakes or rivers drown. Your “solution”: Don’t swim in those places.

    • @nosuchthing8
      @nosuchthing8 2 года назад

      @ it's crazy to jog in that heat

    •  2 года назад

      @@nosuchthing8, have you heard of the Badwater Ultramarathon, a 135-mile race that takes place in mid-July, from the Badwater Basin in Death Valley to the trailhead to Mount Whitney?

    • @nosuchthing8
      @nosuchthing8 2 года назад

      @ focus on 'death valley'

    •  2 года назад

      @@nosuchthing8, to date, no participant has died during or immediately after that race.

  • @scottymathieson9529
    @scottymathieson9529 2 года назад

    Don't forget ELECTROLYTES Doctor. Mike, too much water can flush the blood from important electrolytes, such as Potassium and Sodium, K+ They help with hydration to..

  • @williamwilson6499
    @williamwilson6499 2 года назад

    Funny you mixed your measurements…saying 1 liter is 2.2 pounds instead of 1 kilogram.

    • @flagmichael
      @flagmichael 2 года назад

      It's getting to be common with beverages, which are sold in things like two liter bottles. We still avoid talking about kilograms.

    • @stanj7223
      @stanj7223 2 года назад +1

      He's a doctor so he usually thinks in metric, but he's also talking to the public so he translates to our weird old standards.

  • @raphaelsaint2130
    @raphaelsaint2130 2 года назад

    HOW TO PREVENT DEATH,....DON'T GET JABBED WITH GENE THERAPY.

  •  2 года назад

    You spent no less than zero minutes (or more than that) to talk about “heat acclimation.”

  • @vincentsubmarinismo774
    @vincentsubmarinismo774 2 года назад +6

    Stay in the u.k.
    We get a 2 day summer.
    Stop the scaremongering hyperbole.

    • @mig7287
      @mig7287 2 года назад +1

      😀😀

    • @valeriesmith477
      @valeriesmith477 2 года назад +5

      104 degrees Fahrenheit in London last month?

    • @MJA5
      @MJA5 2 года назад +6

      @@valeriesmith477 it was not the first time it happened, and it wont be the last. Much more extreme weather happened in the British Isles in the 1500s. People don't like to hear about history.

    • @gnostic268
      @gnostic268 2 года назад

      Okay but there are over 4 billion people who don't live in the UK. Go ahead and CENTER yourself in the heatwaves worldwide 🙄

    • @vincentsubmarinismo774
      @vincentsubmarinismo774 2 года назад +3

      @@valeriesmith477 yes, for 2 days!

  • @Theggman83
    @Theggman83 2 года назад

    Yeah yeah, heat exhaustion.. that's what's downing so many sports stars. 🤡🌎

  • @chany9313
    @chany9313 Год назад

    ❤❤❤