What is frostbite?
Frostbite is an injury caused by freezing of the skin and
underlying body tissues. The most common body parts to get
frostbite are toes, feet, fingers, hands, nose, and ears.
How does it occur?
Frostbite occurs when part of your body is exposed to
temperatures or wind chills below freezing, causing the
temperature of the body part to drop below freezing. The
skin and body tissues just below the skin become frozen and
the blood flow decreases.
What are the symptoms?
Frostbitten skin may:
- be hard, pale (white or blue), and cold
- tingle
- feel numb
- blister or turn black in severe cases.
How is it diagnosed?
Your health care provider examines the injured part and
looks for signs of frostbite.
What is the treatment?
If medical help is not available, find shelter and begin
rewarming the frostbitten skin right away. If your gloves
or socks are wet, remove them. You can warm and thaw the
frostbitten skin with one of these methods:
- Place your hands under your armpits or your feet against
a warm person's belly.
- Dry and cover the area with warm clothes and then layers
of blankets.
- Immerse the area in warm water (about 102 to 108°F, or
38.8 to 42.2°C).
Rewarming takes up to an hour. Make sure you find warm
shelter and can complete the process of rewarming once
you've started. It can be painful. You may take
acetaminophen, ibuprofen, or aspirin for the pain. Cover
the thawed area, which may become blistered, with a clean
bandage or cloth.
Drink hot fluids such as coffee or tea. Never drink alcohol
or smoke during the rewarming. Never rub or put snow or
intense, direct heat on the frostbitten areas. Once
frostbitten areas are rewarmed and thawed, it is important
that they not get frozen again because worse tissue injury
will occur.
If the frostbitten areas do not look normal after thawing,
go to an emergency medical facility at once. Treatment may
include:
- a shot of a strong pain reliever
- hyperbaric oxygen (oxygen at greater than normal
atmospheric pressure) given in a special chamber to
deliver high levels of oxygen to frostbitten tissues.
Sometimes body parts that have had severe frostbite may need
to be amputated.
How long will the effects last?
Full recovery from frostbite is likely if just the skin and
uppermost tissue layers were affected. However, it may take
some time for frostbitten areas to get full sensation and
strength back. Sometimes, numbness at the tips of fingers
or toes does not improve. A body part that has been
frostbitten will get colder faster than other parts in the
future.
You may not know the full extent of damage to frostbitten
areas for about 6 weeks. Permanent damage may result when
blood vessels are injured. Tissues then die because of the
lack of oxygen, and the dead tissue can become infected. If
you have gangrene, which can be fatal, the dead area may
have to be amputated. However, amputation does not have to
be done in every case. Often the blackened areas of severe
frostbite heal if they are cared for properly under medical
supervision.
What can I do to help prevent frostbite?
You can best prevent frostbite by being prepared and
dressing appropriately. Be sure your clothing provides
protection for your head, ears, nose, hands, and feet. Wear
several layers of clothing rather than a single, thick
layer. The best materials for layers provide good
insulation and keep moisture away from the skin. Materials
that do this include polypropylene, polyesters, and wool.
Wear an outer garment that is waterproof but will also
"breathe," such as Gore-Tex.
This content is reviewed periodically and is subject to
change as new health information becomes available. The
information is intended to inform and educate and is not a
replacement for medical evaluation, advice, diagnosis or
treatment by a healthcare professional.
Copyright © 2005 McKesson Corporation and/or one of its subsidiaries. All Rights Reserved.