Heat Related Injuries

What a strange species of animal we are. It appears that we don’t quite understand where or how we fit into the nature of things. Every animal species has a specific environmental niche that it is designed to fit into. Each species seems to prefer certain climates and specific ecologic zones and has preferences for food types. This minimizes competition between species and allows several species to occupy the same space while living on different food sources. Humans, on the other hand, have decided to try to conquer and inhabit all possible environments. But, in order to do this we have to create and maintain a tropical environment wherever we go. Hence, clothing. Invented out of the necessity to maintain a micro-tropical environment next to our skin, clothing had nothing to do with modesty or the fashion design industry (all that came much later).

May/June 2005    ISSN-1059-6518    Volume 18 Number 3

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Survival & Self Preservation in Disaster Response

More and more individuals are responding to long-term rescue efforts around the world. Whether the disasters are caused by nature or man, rescuers responding to these far-off places need to know how to take care of themselves from the moment they land, to the time they return home.

March/April 2005   ISSN-1059-6518    Volume 18 Number 2

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FREE RADICALS AND FREE RADICAL SCAVENGERS

January/February 2005  ISSN-1059-6518  Volume  18 Number 1

Free Radicals and Free Radical Scavengers

by R.X. Daley, PharmD

In the portion of this issue’s feature article discussing immersion foot, the treatment section mentioned that it may be helpful to use drugs that are “free radical scavengers” such as a non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs or allopurinol. So, the question becomes, what are free radicals, where do they come from, and how are they managed?

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Non-Freezing Cold Injuries

In the last issue of the this newsletter we bashed the myths

about hypothermia and frostbite and reported on their physiology and the treatment options for the backcountry traveller. Hypothermia and frostbite are the marquee cold weather bad guys and they can be life threatening. In this issue we will explore the supporting cast, another bunch of bad guys who’s goal is to irritate, disable, and disfigure. They don’t get a lot of press because they aren’t typically associated with intense emergencies or dramatic rescues. But these guys are sneaky and dangerous nonetheless and it is important to be able to prevent, recognize, and treat them.

January/February 2005    ISSN-1059-6518    Volume  18 Number 1

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