Tap water, an efficient method for cooling heatstroke victims - a model in dogs

A. Magazanik, Y. Epstein, R. Udassin, Y. Shapiro, E. Sohar

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

29 Scopus citations

Abstract

40 experimentally heatstroked dogs were cooled by immersion in water at temperatures varying from 1-25°C. At all water temperatures, cooling occurred at a much slower rate in comatose dogs than in conscious ones. Dogs cooled in tap water (15-16°C) had the same cooling rate as those cooled in ice water (1-3°C). At water temperatures above 18°C, cooling rates were considerably decreased. Since tap water cooled as efficiently as ice water, its use may prove the method of choice for human heatstroke victims. Its advantages are ready availability, simplicity of use, and its failure to cause shivering.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)864-866
Number of pages3
JournalAviation Space and Environmental Medicine
Volume51
Issue number9 I
StatePublished - 1980

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