Title: Exertional Heat Illness
1Exertional Heat Illness
2Response to Heat Stress
- Thermoregulation is very efficient
- 1C change in core temperature for every 25 to
30C in ambient temperature - For every 0.6C increase in core temperature
there is a 10 increase in basal metabolic rate - Hypothalamus controls thermoregulation
- Ability to dissipate heat to control your core
temperature
3Thermoregulation
- Four processes at work
- Conduction - transfer
- Convection - current
- Radiation - dissipation
- Evaporation - sweat
4Physiology
- Heat illness occurs when the heat generated by
the body and its environment overwhelms its
regulatory systems
5Role of the GI Immune Systems
- In order to bring more blood flow to the skin to
dissipate heat, the body compensates by shunting
blood away from the gut - Epithelial damage causes release of endotoxins
(ACSM 2003) - Exaggerated immune response
- Heat shock proteins generated
- Release of INF, TNF, IL1, IL6, IL2r
6Heat Illness Spectrum
7Definitions
- Heat cramps - cramping of muscles
- Profuse sweating
- Etiology sodium depletion (?controversial?)
- Heat Exhaustion
- Heat cramps, sweating, nausea, vomiting,
headache, malaise, lightheadedness, confusion,
oliguria, poor coordination - Sodium depletion or water depletion
- Heat Syncope
- Fainting
- Inability to maintain cardiac output from
peripheral blood vessel dilation
8Definitions
- Heatstroke - core body temp gt 40C (104F)
- GI and CNS effects during or after exercise
- Continue to perspire
- Nausea, vomiting, headache, hypotension,
confusion, irritability, delirium, seizure - Complications rhabdomyolysis, shock, DIC,
cerebral edema, death
9Heat Illness Spectrum
10Exertional Rhabdomyolysis
- Injury to skeletal muscle resulting in lysis of
cell with subsequent leakage of contents into
plasma - Known to be a complication of vigorous exercise
- What predisposes an athlete to develop this
condition?
11Exertional Rhabdomyolysis
- Predisposing factors
- Overweight or unfit
- Fever, diarrhea viremia, or heat stress
- Drugs
- Novel overexertion
- Inherited muscle enzymopathy
- Sickle Cell Trait??
12Exertional Rhabdomyolysis
- Novel Exertion -gtToo much, too fast
- Rhabdo in Football two a days
- GG Ehlers et al, Journal of Athletic Training
200237151-6 - Muscle Meltdown
- Medical Journal of Australia 1990
- 5 mile fun run, hot(88F) hilly
- Rhabdohind quarter amputation
13Exertional Rhabdomyolysis
- Muscle enzymopathy
- Inherited disorders implicated in recurrent
exertional rhabdomyolysis or ongoing
rhabdomyolysis - McArdles or Myotonic dystropy
- Treem 1987, Argov and Dimauro 1983
14Exertional Rhabdomyolysis
- Sickle Cell Trait
- 1 in 12 African Americans
- Generally benign with no anemia
- Cramping hyperventilation due to lactic
acidosis - Sickling collapse in all-out exertion
- Over 80 cases 10 deaths in college football
- Unlike heatstroke
- Collapse early in 1st few minutes running
- Athlete can talk after they hit the ground
15Exertional Rhabdomyolysis
- Recognition
- gt 5 times the normal serum CK level
- Absolute height does not severity
- Levels Peak _at_ 24-36 hours
- Failure to decline indicates and ongoing process
- Myoglobinuria increases risk of ARF
- Urine dip positive for blood
- Urine micro no red cells seen
16Exertional Rhabdomyolysis
- Treatment
- Maintain vital signs
- Get to ER fast
- IV fluids to maintain urine flow
- Can give 50 of sodium as bicarb
- Corrects acidosis, controls hyperkalemia, makes
myoglobin more soluble - Consider mannitol and furosemide
- Dialyze as necessary for ARF
- Hospital at gt50,000 CK, increased creatinine ?or
myoglobinuria present - RTP at serum CK of 2-3,000 if asymptomatic
17Heat Illness Spectrum
18Prevention in Athletic Competition
- What factors increase the risk?
- Is water enough?
- What is safe for competition?
- Are there different consideration for different
athletes? - Are there different concerns for different sports?
19Risk Factors for Heat Illness
- Drugs alcohol, ephedra
- Poor nutrition eating disorders
- Poor hydration or dehydration
- Chronic diseases Diabetes, HTN, sweat gland
dysfunction - Acute illness URI, gastroenteritis, sunburn
20Dehydration Debate
- Is water enough to overcome risk factors?
- Noakes argues that people still develop this
condition even why they exercise in a fully
hydrated state - ACSM 150-300 ml of water or sports drink every
15 minutes - Avoid preoccupation with H2O intake
21What is safe for competition?
- More emphasis on acclimatization
- Work-rest cycles during different heat loads
- Monitor daily weights in an athlete
- When should an event or practice be cancelled?
22Are there different considerations for different
athletes?
- Sickle cell trait
- Should we be screening for the condition?
- Precautions
- No one day fitness test
- No sprinting gt600m
- No timed miles
- No stadium steps to exhaustion
- Regular fluids
- Stop at first cramp
23Are there different concerns for different sports?
- Football
- Full practice gear
- New NCAA guidelines
24Final Points
- Maintain a high index of suspicion in an athlete
playing under extreme conditions - Appropriate monitoring of athletes by medical
personnel is important in preventing heat illness - Daily weights
- Consider risk of sickle cell trait
- Water is not the only answer
- Slower is better than dead
- Graded training programs
- Work- Rest cycles