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Hyperthermia
Case Presentation
It was July 20 in Houston and the fourth straight day that would have a high
temperature above 100°F. Janice was running some errands and decided to
stop by her mother's house. Janice's mother, Marian, was eighty-four and in
pretty good health. She was able to keep up with her housekeeping and still
tended a small garden in her backyard. Just that morning, Janice had told her
mother not to spend too much time working in the garden today. Janice knew that
the heat could be dangerous, especially to the elderly, and her mother's place
didn't have an air conditioner, but Janice felt that her mother was alert enough
to know her own limits.
When Janice reached her mother's house, she found her mother unconscious on
the couch in the living room. All of the windows in the house were closed. Janice
immediately tried to rouse her mother and was able to get her to say a few words,
but Marnd loss of consciousness. If untreated, heat exhaustion precedes heatstroke,
and heat stroke is often fatal. Treatment for hyperthermia consists of reducing
the body temperature to normal. Special attention is placed on reducing the
temperature of the brain as tissue damage can result if the body temperature
rises above 109°F.
Questions
ian seemed delirious. Janice grabbed the telephone
and called for help. The emergency services operator instructed Janice to apply
cold wash cloths to her mother's forehead and face and if possible to position
her mother in front of a fan while using a spray bottle to spray tepid water
on her skin.
When the paramedics arrived Marian was conscious
but confused and feeling nauseous. At the hospital the doctor told Janice just
how lucky she was to have visited Marian at that moment. He informed Janice
that Marian had suffered heat stroke, a form of hyperthermia and that Janice's
quick action at the house had saved her mother's life. Marian was making rapid
progress to recovery but was being given fluids and electrolytes intravenously
and was going to stay in the hospital overnight for observation.
Case Background
Hyperthermia occurs when the body temperature increases
without an increase in the set point of the thermoregulatory center in the hypothalamus.
Heat exhaustion and heatstroke are two common forms of hyperthermia. Symptoms
of heat exhaustion include thirst, fatigue, profuse sweat, and giddiness or
delirium. Individuals with heat exhaustion generally have a normal or only slightly
elevated body temperature and the symptoms are the result of the loss of water
and electrolytes. Symptoms of heatstroke include a temperature of 104°F,
absence of sweating, a
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