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What are the Symptoms of Hypothermia?

D. Jeffress
D. Jeffress

Hypothermia is a condition in which a person's body temperature drops below a safe level, and the body is unable to return to its normal temperature unassisted. Hypothermia can lead to brain impairment and death if symptoms are not recognized and treated immediately. Common initial symptoms of hypothermia can include cold skin, shivering, balance problems, and lack of judgment. More severe symptoms of hypothermia are a drastically slowed pulse rate, shallow breathing, disorientation, and even a loss of consciousness or death. Medical attention should be sought immediately for persons who exhibit any symptoms of hypothermia.

An individual's normal body temperature is usually in the range of 96-100 degrees Fahrenheit (about 36-38 degrees Celsius). Mild or early state hypothermia can set in when body temperature drops just one or two degrees. The first symptoms of hypothermia include goose bumps, numbing in the fingers, toes, and face, and slight shivering. A person may begin to lose their balance, experience blurred vision, and display poor judgment and reasoning skills.

Hot beverages can warm a person suffering from hypothermia.
Hot beverages can warm a person suffering from hypothermia.

If body temperature is not immediately restored, people may begin to experience more serious symptoms. An individual with moderate hypothermia may lose the ability to stand up, experience significant numbness in his or her limbs, and feel very confused, weak, and sleepy. He or she may stop responding coherently to questions and make no attempt to articulate his or her words. The individual's lips, ears, and nose often begin turning blue as hypothermia continues to set in. He or she may experience a dangerously low pulse, muscle stiffness, and slow, shallow, inconsistent breathing.

Hypothermia is a condition characterized by a drop in body temperature, usually due to exposure to cold weather.
Hypothermia is a condition characterized by a drop in body temperature, usually due to exposure to cold weather.

Severe hypothermia can be life-threatening if it is not treated right away. As the body's temperature continues to plummet, shivering may stop and the individual may completely lose consciousness. His or her body may be cold to the touch and assume a pale blue color. Breathing is extremely shallow, and must be carefully monitored to ensure that it does not stop completely. In very severe or prolonged hypothermia, the individual's internal organs, including the heart, stop functioning completely.

Warm intravenous fluid can be administered to raise a person's body temperature.
Warm intravenous fluid can be administered to raise a person's body temperature.

As long as the symptoms of hypothermia are recognized in time, first aid and follow-up medical treatment can usually prevent serious consequences. An individual needs to be removed from the cold environment, stripped of wet or cold clothes, and warmed using blankets, hot beverages, and dry compresses. Critical care doctors and nurses employ warmed intravenous fluids and hot, moist oxygen treatments to restore body temperature in persons with severe hypothermia.

Discussion Comments

letshearit

If you enjoy outdoor winter sports, it is a really good idea to make sure that you don't over due it when you are outside having fun.

If you are outside for a long time in cold temperatures, make sure to warm up frequently. If you experience any numbness and tingling in your toes or hands get inside immediately. There have been a lot of cases of frostbite and hypothermia in people who didn't expect it to be so cold, or anything bad to happen so fast.

All people experience hypothermia at different speeds, know your body and react accordingly to any odd sensations when in the cold.

Sara007

If you have young children be very careful when letting them go swimming for the first time. Often they are much more susceptible to lower temperatures than older kids and adults are and can more easily get hypothermia.

If you notice your son or daughter shivering in a pool, or looking a little blue around the edges, remove them from the water immediately and get them dry. Make sure they are taken someplace warm, or sat in the sunshine until they stop shivering and the color returns.

A good idea is to swim with your child and let your body heat keep them warm.

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    • Hot beverages can warm a person suffering from hypothermia.
      By: food pictures studio
      Hot beverages can warm a person suffering from hypothermia.
    • Hypothermia is a condition characterized by a drop in body temperature, usually due to exposure to cold weather.
      By: luna
      Hypothermia is a condition characterized by a drop in body temperature, usually due to exposure to cold weather.
    • Warm intravenous fluid can be administered to raise a person's body temperature.
      By: ShpilbergStudios
      Warm intravenous fluid can be administered to raise a person's body temperature.
    • Goose bumps are one of the first symptoms of hypothermia.
      By: Oleksii Sergieiev
      Goose bumps are one of the first symptoms of hypothermia.
    • If a person with hypothermia fails to restore a normal body temperature promptly, she may suffer from more severe symptoms.
      By: vladimirfloyd
      If a person with hypothermia fails to restore a normal body temperature promptly, she may suffer from more severe symptoms.