• Registration
  • Login
JETem
  • Home
  • About
    • Aim and Scope
    • Our Team
    • Editorial Board
    • FAQ
  • Issues
    • Current Issue
    • Ahead of Print
    • Past Issues
  • Visual EM
    • Latest Visual EM
    • Search Visual EM
    • Thumbnail Library
  • For Authors
    • Instructions for Authors
    • Submit to JETem
    • Photo Consent
    • Policies
      • Peer Review Policy
      • Copyright Policy
      • Editorial Policy, Ethics and Responsibilities
      • Conflicts of Interest & Informed Consent
      • Open Access Policy
  • For Reviewers
    • Instructions for JETem Reviewers
    • Interested in Being a JETem Reviewer?
  • Topic
    • Abdominal / Gastroenterology
    • Administration
    • Board Review
    • Cardiology / Vascular
    • Clinical Informatics, Telehealth and Technology
    • Dermatology
    • EMS
    • Endocrine
    • ENT
    • Faculty Development
    • Genitourinary
    • Geriatrics
    • Hematology / Oncology
    • Infectious Disease
    • Miscellaneous
    • Neurology
    • Ob / Gyn
    • Ophthalmology
    • Orthopedics
    • Pediatrics
    • Pharmacology
    • Procedures
    • Psychiatry
    • Renal / Electrolytes
    • Respiratory
    • Social Determinants of Health
    • Toxicology
    • Trauma
    • Ultrasound
    • Urology
    • Wellness
    • Wilderness
  • Modality
    • Curricula
    • Innovations
    • Lectures
    • Certifying Exam Practice Cases
      • Clinical Care Cases
      • Communication & Procedural Cases
      • Traditional Oral Boards
    • Podcasts
    • Simulation
    • Small Group Learning
    • Team Based Learning
    • Visual EM
  • Contact Us

Trauma and Hyperthermia

William Webster, MD *, Dallas Beaird, MD^ and Linda L Herman, MD *

*Sutter Roseville Medical Center, Department of Emergency Medicine, Roseville, CA
^Vituity Healthcare and Medical Staffing Services, St Agnes Medical Center, Department of Emergency Medicine, Fresno, CA

Correspondence should be addressed to Linda L Herman, MD, FACEP at hermanll@sutterhealth.org

DOI: https://doi.org/10.21980/J8.52308 Issue 10:4
Current IssueSimulationTrauma
[mrp_rating_result]

ABSTRACT:

Audience:

Emergency medicine residents and medical students on emergency medicine rotation

Introduction:

Participating in strenuous activities during hot, humid weather places a person at risk for heat emergencies such as heat exhaustion and heat stroke.  When the environmental temperature is greater than 35◦ Celsius (95◦ F), the body can no longer radiate heat to the environment. When the humidity is  greater than 75%, the body can no longer use evaporation for cooling.1  The hot, humid environment has effectively eliminated both mechanisms to decrease body heat, and the individual is at risk for exertional heat injury.1  Altered mental status that occurs during heat stroke interferes with the ability to obtain an adequate history as to the etiology of hyperthermia and altered mental status.  It is imperative that the patient receive cooling measures immediately and that supportive measures be instituted while evaluating the patient for other etiologies including trauma-related injuries.1, 2, 3

Educational Objectives:

By the end of this oral board session, examinees will be able to:  1) construct a differential to evaluate a patient with undifferentiated altered mental status and trauma, 2) recognize the signs and symptoms of heat stroke, 3) complete an evaluation of a patient with both hyperthermia and trauma, and 4) demonstrate efficient and correct treatment of a patient with hyperthermia. 

Educational Methods:

This oral board case followed the standard American Board of Emergency Medicine style case in a tertiary care hospital with access to all specialists and resources needed. This case was tested using seven first-year and five second-year residents in an ACGME (Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education) accredited emergency medicine residency program. 

Research Methods:

Immediate feedback was solicited both from the learners and from the evaluators following the debriefing session. Residents were asked to evaluate the educational value of the case using a 1-5 Likert scale (5 being excellent). Evaluators were asked to score the residents using the ACGME core competencies with a scale of 1-8, 1-4 being unacceptable and 5-8 being acceptable.

Results:

Twelve residents (seven PGY-1 and five PGY-2) completed this oral board case. The average score was 5.34/8. Five residents missed zero critical actions. Six residents failed to explore other etiologies of altered mental status in the case once the temperature was requested and given.  Three residents did not complete the primary and secondary survey searching for all injuries. Only two residents did not begin appropriate cooling measures.

The learners rated the educational value of the case as 4.8/5. Seven residents reported that the case increased their medical knowledge; five residents reported that it somewhat increased their medical knowledge. All residents rated the case as helpful in preparing to manage this medical condition.

Discussion:

The educational content from this case was effective. This is a high acuity moderate occurrence case that requires an extensive differential with a thorough evaluation as well as the recognition for immediate treatment of hyperthermia. This makes this case excellent for practice and discussion for the evaluation of patients with trauma and the treatment of hyperthermia. We learned during implementation that this case has a moderate degree of difficulty but does provide practice in the area of completing a thorough primary and secondary survey and education concerning best practices for treating heat emergencies.

Topics:

Altered mental status, heat emergency, heat stroke, hyperthermia, trauma.

Icon

Trauma and Hyperthermia - Manuscript

1 file(s) 4.05 MB
Download
Issue 10:4

Reviews:

[mrp_rating_entry_details_list layout="inline" show_rating_items="false"][mrp_rating_form]
Nonketotic Hyperglycemia Hemichorea. MRI Unnnotated. JETem 2025

Case Report of a Patient Presenting with...

16 Oct, 25

Myopericarditis and Pulmonary Edema

16 Oct, 25

JETem is an online, open access, peer-reviewed, journal-repository for EM educators. We are PMC Indexed.

Most Viewed

  • Novel Asynchronous Emergency Medicine Sub-Internship Curriculum Utilizing Free Open Access Medical Education (FOAM)
  • A Low-Cost Task Trainer Constructed from Silicone Nipple Covers
  • Pizza and Paintballs: A Cost-Effective Model for Incision and Drainage Simulation Training
  • Abdominal Pain and Vaginal Discharge: An Eye-Opening Simulation Case about Human Trafficking
  • The EMazing Race: A Novel Gamified Board and Clinical Practice Review for Emergency Medicine Residents

Visit Our Collaborators

Creative Commons Licence
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.

About

Education

Learners should benefit from active learning. JETem accepts submissions of team-based learning, small group learning, simulation, podcasts, lectures, innovations, curricula, question sets, and visualEM.

Scholarship

We believe educators should advance through the scholarship of their educational work. JETem gives educators the opportunity to publish scholarly academic work so that it may be widely distributed, thereby increasing the significance of their results.

Links

  • Home
  • Aim and Scope
  • Current Issue
  • For Reviewers
  • Instructions for Authors
  • Contact Us

Newsletter

Sign up to receive updates from JETem regarding newly published issues and findings.

Copyright Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International