Hyperthermia in a sentence as a noun

Google will help - start with hyperthermia therapy if interested in going down the rabbithole

If you dont thermoregulate properly then you will die of hyperthermia.

Drowning, injury from falling debris or flotsam, and hyperthermia are the most immediate risks. Past a day or so, hydration, food, and exposure become more critical.

Unless it's above body temperature, the local ambient air isn't heating your skin up, and if it's that hot you need to sweat profusely to avoid hyperthermia.

Instead your argument seems to be that we should be subjecting people to significant risk from rhabdo, hyperthermia, which to be clear can be entirely significant.

I found the hyperthermia/hypothermia risk interesting. The survival sphere is not temperature controlled, and will adjust to ambient.

Hospitals already do this for patients with hypo/hyperthermia. This could be monitored/regulated with a second band worn on the upper arm near the armpit which measures body temperature directly.

Even if it did a perfect job of that, which it won't, it won't keep you from dying of hypo- or hyperthermia. It won't replace air conditioning because it won't do anything about the humidity in the air, which is a major discomfort factor in the summer in most non-desert climates.

And there's a very real concern for hyperthermia, rhabdomyolysis with an extended struggle, dysrhythmia, then maybe ketamine becomes the better option. That being said, ketamine should be an EMS decision to minimize risk to patient and others, not "at LE direction".

> Key signs of excited delirium are aggression, altered mental status, and diaphoresis/hyperthermia. Is the primary treatment beating/tasing while shouting "stop resisting"?

On a similar and more hopeful tangent, there is "magnetic hyperthermia" which is being developed. Essentially, magnetic nanoparticles are targetted to tumor sites and then subjected to alternating magnetic frequencies.

I have no doubt that there is a point at which moving air as opposed to static would cause hyperthermia faster, but it quite obviously needs the air temperature to be above body temperature and actually even above the temperature the body needs to reach for hyperthermia to become an issue. It probably needs to be even higher than that, because of sweat, but I don't have an easy way of working out how much higher.

Gov/pmc/articles/PMC4944485/ > Neurological and cognitive dysfunction may occur acutely after an episode of hyperthermia and may lead to chronic damage, reported to occur in 50 % of survivors discharged from an ICU after heatstroke [87]. The pathophysiological mechanisms are presumed to be similar to those described above, but, in addition, the integrity of the BBB is disrupted allowing translocation of systemic toxins to enter the cerebral circulation.

Hyperthermia definitions

noun

abnormally high body temperature; sometimes induced (as in treating some forms of cancer)

See also: hyperthermy