The FIRST AID modules provide information on caring for injuries and sickness in a backcountry environment when you are hours or even days away from definitive medical care, with focus on what is commonly encountered in the mountains. These modules only provide an overview, but are not meant as adequate instruction for beginners. While traveling in remote, wilderness areas ensure you group includes qualified wilderness medicine professionals, or get a WFA, WAFA or WFR certification yourself.
Cold injuries occur when the skin is damaged by cold due to direct or indirect contact. Frostnip, frostbite and trenchfoot are discussed in detail below.
FROSTNIP
Frostnip is temporary near-freezing of epidermal (top, superficial layer of the skin) tissues, especially the nose, cheeks, fingers and toes.
Signs and Symptoms
- Pain
- Tingling
- Numbness
- White, waxy skin
Treatment
- Replace any wet clothing with warm, dry clothes.
- Place cold hands in groin or armpits, put feet on a partner’s abdomen, use warm hands to cover nose and cheeks.
- Prevent further exposure. This area will be more susceptible to future cold injury.
FROSTBITE
Frostbite is the freezing of tissues, especially at the extremeties. Frostbite can range from superficial (epidermis and dermis damage only) to full thickness freezing.
Signs and symptoms
Before re warming: Pale, numb skin and pliable tissue
After re warming: Blisters extending to the tips of toes/fingers
Before re warming: Skin will be hard, white, waxy, numb, sometimes burgundy-black
After re warming: Late-forming dark blisters which do not extend to the tips on completely frozen extremities.
Treatment
- Superficial Frostbite
- Water bath: Place the affected extremity in a warm water bath between 37° - 39° C for at least 30 minutes, until circulation is restored. Avoid any direct contact with the container, and expect the bath to be very painful.
- Body-to-body rewarming: Place frostbitten hands against the skin in armpits or groins. Place bare, frostbitten feet on a partner’s abdomen. Do not rub.
- Protect: Protect the injury from pressure, friction, trauma, and re freezing. Wrap the affected extremities loosely in a bandage or clothes.
- Ibuprofen: For pain and inflammation.
2. Full-thickness Frostbite
- Leave frozen if there is possibility of re-freezing: Do not consider re-warming parts affected with full thickness frostbite unless evacuation will take many hours or days.
- Dress and insulate: Wrap the injured area with gauze sponges between fingers and toes, surrounding them loosely. Insulate the area with non cotton material and cover with a windproof or plastic layer.
- Protect: Protect the injury from pressure, friction, trauma and re freezing.
- Do not warm with fires. This will most likely burn the tissue. Do not break blisters. Do not rub.
- Do not allow re freezing, in case spontaneous thawing occurs.
- Evacuate: All full thickness frostbite injuries should be evacuated immediately. For recovery of an affected extremity, advanced medical care must be provided with the first 12-24 hours. During evacuation, re-warmed tissue could freeze again, while frozen tissue could thaw spontaneously in case you decide to withhold rewarming. This cycle further damages the tissue, and draws heat from an already weak body, which could further lead to hypothermia.