A 24-year-old male snowboarder was buried in an avalanche for 20 h and rescued on the next day at a depth of 2.3 m below the snow surface. A large air pocket was noted in front of his mouth and nose. He was responsive but moved restlessly and uncoordinatedly. The epitympanic temperature was 22.5 °C. He was bradycardic (35/min), and a right bundle branch block with Osborn waves was noted. Rewarming (1 °C/h) was initiated with continuous hemodialysis; core temperature raised to 29.8 °C within 4 h. At 30 °C he became conscious. With rewarming, the heart rate increased to 90 beats per minute and the ECG changes disappeared; nonfreezing cold injuries were noted. On the next day, his pulmonary function deteriorated-fluid overload of 9 L since admission was diagnosed. With spontaneous diuresis, the situation improved. On Day 4, the neurologist reported subtle polyneuropathy in both legs secondary to hypothermia, without tendency to regress. This case occurred more than 20 years ago but has not been reported yet. To this day, this is the third-longest critical avalanche burial ever reported. We discuss the circumstances of this accident, the clinical course, and how treatment has changed since 2000.
Download full-text PDF |
Source |
---|---|
http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/10806032231220403 | DOI Listing |
Materials (Basel)
December 2024
Huanjiang Laboratory, Zhuji 311800, China.
Flexible fibers, such as biomass particles and glass fibers, are critical raw materials in the energy and composites industries. Assemblies of the fibers show strong interlocking, non-Newtonian and compressible flows, intermittent avalanches, and high energy dissipation rates due to their elongation and flexibility. Conventional mechanical theories developed for regular granular materials, such as dry sands and pharmaceutical powders, are often unsuitable for modeling flexible fibers, which exhibit more complex mechanical behaviors.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPhys Rev E
November 2024
Institute of Earthquake Prediction Theory and Mathematical Geophysics, RAS, Profsoyuznaya 84/32, 117997 Moscow, Russia.
We study two prototypical models of self-organized criticality, namely sandpile automata with deterministic (Bak-Tang-Wiesenfeld) and probabilistic (Manna model) dynamical rules, focusing on the nature of stress fluctuations induced by driving-adding grains during avalanche propagation, and dissipation through avalanches that hit the system boundary. Our analysis of stress evolution time series reveals robust cyclical trends modulated by collective fluctuations with dissipative avalanches. These modulated cycles attain higher harmonics, characterized by multifractal measures within a broad range of timescales.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFScand J Trauma Resusc Emerg Med
December 2024
Department of Emergency Medicine, Lausanne University Hospital and University of Lausanne, CHUV, Rue du Bugnon 46, Lausanne, 1011, Switzerland.
Phys Rev Lett
November 2024
Computational Physics Laboratory, Tampere University, P.O. Box 600, FI-33014 Tampere, Finland.
The depinning transition critical point is manifested as power-law distributed avalanches exhibited by slowly driven elastic interfaces in quenched random media. Here we show that since avalanches with different starting heights relative to the mean interface height or different initial local interface curvatures experience different excess driving forces due to elasticity, avalanches close to the "global" critical point of non-mean-field systems can be separated into populations of subcritical, critical, and supercritical ones. The asymmetric interface height distribution results in an excess of supercritical avalanches, manifested as a "bump" in the avalanche size distribution cutoff.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNano Lett
December 2024
Institute of Flexible Electronics (IFE, Future Technologies), Xiamen University, Xiang'an Campus, Xiang'an South Road, Xiamen, 361102, Fujian, China.
Photon avalanche (PA) upconversion in lanthanide nanosystems represents a groundbreaking discovery, demonstrating an optical nonlinearity exceeding 50. This remarkable sensitivity to even the slightest light perturbations unlocks new possibilities for ultrasensitive biosensing, super-resolution imaging, and a range of other applications. This review delves into the fundamental mechanisms underlying PA and the approaches for controlling energy flow within these nanomaterials.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEnter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!