Title: Douglas J. Casa, PhD, ATC, FACSM, FNATA
1ACSM/DOD Roundtable EHS- Return to Play/Duty
Issues Recognition and Treatment Session
3-DiscussantAthletics Perspective
- Douglas J. Casa, PhD, ATC, FACSM, FNATA
- Director, Athletic Training Education
- Associate Professor, Department of Kinesiology
- Research Associate, Human Performance Laboratory
- University of Connecticut
25 Key Points to Emphasize The Recovery Story
Begins Here
- 1) Valid Temperature Assessment
- 2) Rapid Cooling Techniques
- Multiple viable options
- 3) On-site cooling
- 4) Cool-First/Transport Second
- 5) Benefits of Cold Water Immersion
3High School/College ATC Study 2008
Mazerolle, Scruggs, Casa, et al. Perceptions and
behavior regarding exertional heat stroke among
athletic trainers. Journal of Athletic Training,
2009.
4High School/College ATC Study 2008
Mazerolle, Scruggs, Casa, et al. Perceptions and
behavior regarding exertional heat stroke among
athletic trainers. Journal of Athletic Training,
2009.
5Overall High Responders
Casa, Becker, Ganio, Brown, et al. Validity of
devices that assess body temperature during
outdoor exercise in the heat. Journal of
Athletic Training. 200742(3)333-342.
6Options for Assessing Core Temperature
- Axillary- NOT VALID
- Oral- NOT VALID
- Tympanic- NOT VALID
- Temporal- NOT VALID
- Forehead Sticker- NOT VALID FOR EHS
- Ingestible Thermistor- A LITTLE TOO LATE
- Esophageal- NOT PRACTICAL
- Rectal- YOUR ONLY OPTION
Casa, Armstrong, Ganio, Yeargin. Exertional
heat stroke in competitive athletes. Current
Sports Medicine Reports. 2005, 4309-317.
7The key determinant for an exertional heat
stroke outcome is the time above a critical
temperature, not the maximum temperature
obtained.(key temperature 105.5-106oF)
Pope L. Mosley, MD, FACSM University of New
Mexico School of Medicine Quote from May 29,
2003, ACSM Annual Meeting in San Francisco, CA
8From The Inter-Association Task-Force on
Exertional Heat Illnesses Consensus Statement,
2003
- Provided that adequate emergency medical care
- is available on-site (i.e. ATC, EMT, or
physician), - it is recommended to cool first via cold water
immersion, then transport second.
9High School/College ATC Study 2008
Mazerolle, Scruggs, Casa, et al. Perceptions and
behavior regarding exertional heat stroke among
athletic trainers. Journal of Athletic Training,
2009.
10High School/College ATC Study 2008
Mazerolle, Scruggs, Casa, et al. Perceptions and
behavior regarding exertional heat stroke among
athletic trainers. Journal of Athletic Training,
2009.
11THE CURRIE RESPONSE- 1798
Casa, McDermott, et al. Cold-water immersion
the gold standard for exertional heat stroke
treatment. Exercise Sport Sciences Reviews,
2007,35(3)141-149
129.5min
108oF to 102oF
17min
83min
Casa, Armstrong, Ganio, Yeargin. Exertional
heat stroke in competitive athletes. Current
Sports Medicine Reports. 2005, 4309-317.
13Casa, McDermott, et al. Cold-water immersion
the gold standard for exertional heat stroke
treatment. Exercise Sport Sciences Reviews,
2007,35(3)141-149
14Survival Trumps Convenience
- Costrini et al, ACSM 1989, Med Sci 1990
- 100 (252/252) Survival rate of marines who
suffered exertional heat stroke while doing basic
training at Paris Island, South Carolina - Brodeur et al, J. Emergency Nursing, 1989 (2008
new data) - 100 Survival rate of runners who suffer
exertional heat stroke at Falmouth Road Race,
average 10-12 per year, over 350 cases being
treated this way in last 30 years