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Journal Article

Citation

Nair CS, Singh I, Malhotra MS, Mathew L, Dasgupta A, Purakayastha SS, Shanker J. Aviat. Space Environ. Med. 1977; 48(3): 192-194.

Copyright

(Copyright © 1977, Aerospace Medical Association)

DOI

unavailable

PMID

857795

Abstract

We studied 12 subjects, who had suffered first- to third-degree frostbite at high altitude during winter, at Delhi, India. At normal sea level pressure there (PB 740 mm Hg) and in a decompression chamber at a simulated altitude of 4085 m, the studies were at both 26 degrees C and 6.8 degrees C. A group of control (non-frostbite) subjects of comparable age were also studied for their heat output at 26 degrees C, PB 740 mm Hg. Heat output from the hands of a group of mountaineers from the sea level was also studied at 2121 m at 25 degrees C and 4485 m at 7 degrees C. The results indicated that the frostbite subjects had a significantly higher heat ouput at PB 740 mm Hg and 26 degrees C than the non-frostbite subjects. When the former were tested at sea level (PB 740 mm Hg) at 6.8 degrees C, the hand heat output showed a marked and significant decrease. On testing them at a simulated altitude of 4085 m at 26 degrees C and at 6.8 degrees C, a very highly significant reduction in hand heat output was observed compared to their initial value at sea level (740 mm Hg) and 26 degrees C. Their hand heat output also showed a very highly significant decrease compared to mountaineers at 4485 m and 7 degrees C.


Language: en

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