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With the onset of summers in northern India, drinking water and keeping yourself hydrated is more than a simple beauty tip. It’s one of the most important things that you can do to protect yourself, and health experts cannot emphasise it enough.
A common and potentially life threatening health situation you need to safeguard yourself against is a heatstroke. While the condition can often be oversimplified as dehydration, there’s more to it.
Dr Manoj Sharma, Senior Consultant, Internal Medicine, Fortis Escorts Heart Institute, says that simply put, a heatstroke refers to a situation where the body temperature is higher than 104 degree Fahrenheit.
Too caught up to read? Listen to the story here:
Dr Sharma points out that people often have a tendency to term any dehydration related symptom a heatstroke which is incorrect.
A heat syndrome is marked by sweating profusely, fall in blood pressure, heat cramps and dehydration which can include nausea, dizziness, weakness and lethargy. However in all of this, consciousness remains normal. When confusion and unconsciousness enter the picture, it suggests a heatstroke and is cause for alarm.
Since there is a rise in the body temperature during a heatstroke, the body tries to control it.
Dr Sharma points out that a fall in sweating, which also happens during a heatstroke, will also cause the body temperature to rise. Sweating is a protective mechanism which gets affected during a heatstroke.
Dr Narinder Pal Singh, Medical Director and Senior Director, Internal Medicine, Max Hospital, explains it further in the following manner:
Beyond a fall in sweating, a heatstroke also includes other severe effects on the body in the form of muscular damage and ill-effects on the brain that may lead to seizure, unconsciousness, coma and even death.
Anyone engaging in a strenuous activity in a hot environment is exposed to the possibility of a heatstroke, says Dr Sharma. Additionally, prolonged exposure to heat is another cause.
Dr Singh adds:
In case of babies, young children or the elderly (especially those over the age of 65), especial care is needed to avoid a heatstroke.
Also, anyone who is on medication for a mental illness, diabetes, blood pressure or someone who consumes too much alcohol or is obese is left more vulnerable to it.
Dr Sharma suggests that a heatstroke builds gradually. The initial symptoms would appear as mild exposure to heat in the form of confusion, agitation, slurred speech, muscle cramps, nausea, irritability and lethargy. Your heartbeat and breathing may become rapid and shallow as well.
Dr Singh mentions physiological symptoms to pay attention to.
The idea is to address these symptoms before they progress to a heatstroke. Dr Sharma lists them down in the following manner:
The Moderus Operandi When a Stroke Has Ocurred
If the person is physically capable, make them take a bath, or wrap them in a wet bedsheet, if they’re not, he adds. If they’re conscious, they should be hydrated and made to drink water.
Dr Singh says:
The doctor has a word of caution with this advice - to avoid sugary drinks.
A heatstroke leads to increase in the osmolality of the blood, the blood becomes thicker. Consequently, concentrated drinks won’t help to thin it. Water is your best bet or a fluid rich in electrolytes.
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Published: 09 Apr 2019,09:46 AM IST