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Heat stroke is not just getting too hot. It is a breakdown of the body’s ability to thermoregulate.
It can be deadly, resulting in stroke, organ damage, and cardiac arrhythmias that increase the risk of heart attacks.
Act quickly.
The image on the left below came from the Cleveland Clinic’s robust page on Heat Stroke. Visit their page for more information.
If you suspect heat stroke, Call 911. See the graphic below for symptoms.
After calling 911…
Begin Reducing Body Temperature Immediately. Do not wait for emergency medical personnel.
- Move the person out of the sun or heat to a cooler spot (air-conditioned if possible).
- Remove any excess clothing or athletic equipment.
- Pour water over their skin and use anything available to fan them.
- Apply ice or cold packs to their armpits or neck.
- Soak a towel in ice water and apply it to the skin. Cover as much of their skinโs surface area as possible. Replace with newly soaked towels every minute or so.
The “Do Nots”
- Do not give the person fever-reducing medication, like acetaminophen. These medications donโt help heat stroke, which happens for different reasons than a fever. They may also worsen complications like organ damage.
- Donโt give them any fluids to drink. This might seem surprising. But a person experiencing heat stroke might accidentally inhale the liquid (aspiration), which can be dangerous.
- Overview
- Symptoms & Causes
- Risk Factors for Heat Stroke
- Complications
- Diagnosis and Tests
- Management & Treatment
- Outlook & Prognosis
Prevention
Acclimate. Do not walk onto a football field, baseball diamond, or soccer pitch from the air-conditioned comfort of the game room in your basement.
Download Heads Up Football and Hydration Guidelines from the link below.
Korey Stringer Institute’s Heat-up safely: the 2-week ramp
Goal: 7โ14 days of gradually longer/easier-to-moderate sessions in the heat. Most heat adaptations arrive within a week and consolidate by ~2 weeks; they fade after ~1 week away from heat, so keep 2โ3 heat exposures/week to maintain. Korey Stringer InstitutePubMedCDC
Week 1
- Days 1โ2: 20โ30 min easy in the heat (RPE ~4โ5/10). Stop if symptoms escalate.
- Days 3โ4: 35โ45 min easy โ steady (brief 1โ2 min pickups only).
- Day 5: 45โ60 min easy.
- Day 6: Optional cross-train/cooler session + 20โ30 min easy heat exposure.
- Day 7: 45โ60 min steady.
Week 2
- Day 8: 50โ60 min steady; short reps at moderate effort with long, cool rests.
- Day 9: 30โ40 min easy.
- Day 10: 60โ75 min steady (or sport practice with built-in shade/water breaks).
- Day 11: Quality session in heat but reduce usual intensity/volume ~20โ30% and extend recoveries.
- Days 12โ14: Resume normal plan if youโve had no red-flag symptoms; keep breaks, shade and water handy.
Pacing rule: Use effort/RPE or heart rate, not your cool-weather splits. Expect higher HR at a given pace until you acclimate. (ACSM/NATA consensus.) PubMedPMC
Hydration & sodium (simple and individualized)
- Before: Start hydrated; if urine is dark, sip fluids over the hours before training. (ACSM) PubMed
- During: Aim to limit body-mass loss to โค2%. Practical start point is ~200โ300 mL every 15 min, then adjust from your sweat rate. (NATA/KSI) PMCKorey Stringer Institute
- After: Replace ~125โ150% of the fluid deficit over the next 2โ4 h (include sodium). Example: if you lost 1 kg (~1 L), drink 1.25โ1.5 L with electrolytes. (ACSM/NATA) PMCCiteSeerX
- Sodium: For long/hot sessions or โsalty sweaters,โ include ~20โ50 mmol/L sodium (~460โ1150 mg/L) via sports drink + salty foods. (NATA/ACSM) PMC
- Find your sweat rate: Weigh before/after (minimal clothing, towel off sweat). Each 1 lb (0.45 kg) lost โ 16 oz (475 mL). Re-check after you acclimateโsweat rate usually rises. (KSI) koreystringer-institute.media.uconn.edu
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Welcome to our blog about all things cool !!! Focus: All things that are cold, get cold, make other things colder, and stay cold longer. How cold therapy benefits humans. How cold therapy can be layered with other non-drug therapeutics.