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      Emergency Medical Services : Clinical Practice and Systems Oversight 

      Cold exposure illness and injury

      edited-book
      John Wiley & Sons, Ltd

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          Part 12: cardiac arrest in special situations: 2010 American Heart Association Guidelines for Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation and Emergency Cardiovascular Care.

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            Hypothermia: pathophysiology, clinical settings, and management.

            Hypothermia, defined as a core temperature less than 35 degrees C, is frequently not recognized, in part because of the inadequacy of standard thermometers. This entity has multiple causes and unique pathophysiologic consequences that complicate diagnosis and treatment. Understanding of the physiology of thermoregulation is important in light of recent advances in therapy using core rewarming. Pathophysiology, etiology and management of the hypothermia syndrome are reviewed.
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              Urban hypothermia: preferred temperature and thermal perception in old age.

              A study of 17 elderly men and 13 young adults of similar body build and wearing equivalent clothing insulation (0.8 clo) showed that when given control over their environment the elderly preferred the same mean comfort temperature (22-23 degrees C) but manipulated ambient temperature much less precisely than the young. Slow adjustment of ambient temperature was related to some cases to a higher temperature-discrimination threshold. These findings suggest that both physiological and behavioural changes contribute to the increased vulnerability of old people in cold conditions.
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                Author and book information

                Book Chapter
                February 09 2015
                : 349-357
                10.1002/9781118990810.ch48
                4a61db18-7a78-4ff4-9f11-7a84b0e221ea
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