You’re on a backcountry ski trip with 4 friends, and currently a four-hour ski from the nearest road. The weather over the last 24 hours has been challenging, with unanticipated daily highs of 9°F (-12°C) and nighttime lows of -20°F (-28°C).
When you stopped to camp one of your companions revealed that they may have frostbite on their fingers. As the Wilderness First Responder (WFR) in the group, you asked if you could look at their hands. You were struck by how white they looked, especially the fingers on the right hand.
The patient is a 24-year-old with possible frostbite to their right fingers.
The patient’s distal joints of the fingers of their right hand are white, numb and hard. The remainder of the hand is cool, pale and soft. There is no injury to the right thumb, left hand/fingers or to the feet. The patient is not hypothermic.
Time |
4:00pm |
Level of Responsiveness (LOR) |
A+O x4 |
Heart Rate (HR) |
92, strong, regular |
Respiratory Rate (RR) |
16, easy, regular |
Skin Color Temperature Moisture (SCTM) |
Mucous membranes are pink, skin is warm, dry (except right hand) |
Blood Pressure (BP) |
radial pulses present |
Pupils |
PERRL |
Temperature (T) |
99°F (37.2°C) oral |
Symptoms |
Denies. |
Allergies |
None. |
Medications |
Ibuprofen 400mg three times today for muscle aches. |
Pertinent History |
No previous cold injury history, no relevant medical history. |
Last in/out |
Patient is well hydrated, has been eating throughout the day, normal urine and bowel function. |
Events |
Patient was skiing in cold weather and had trouble keeping their hands warm. |
What is your assessment and plan? Take a few minutes to figure out your own assessment and make a plan. Don’t cheat—no reading on without answering this first!
Possible frostbite to the fingers of the right hand.
Set up camp.
Make a decision whether to try to thaw the fingers.
Evacuate tomorrow.
If we thaw the fingers we will need to keep them warm and protected from injury during the evacuation. Tomorrow’s temperature prediction is for highs not reaching 0°F (-17°C).
In an urban setting, frostbite is thawed in the emergency room. In the wilderness a critical decision is whether to thaw in the field. Things to consider in making this decision:
You explained the situation and the decision-making parameters to the patient and your companions. The patient agreed that their fingers would likely thaw slowly now that they are warm and in shelter. The patient anticipated they could ski to the road tomorrow with one pole and without a pack. They agreed to the warm water bath.
Before immersing their hand in water, you removed a ring from their index finger and a bracelet from their wrist. The patient immersed the fingers of their right hand into the pot of warm water after we tested it and estimated it as warm bath water. The pain was intense. The patient was only able to tolerate the procedure for 15 minutes. Assessment at that point showed the fingers were pink and warm to the end of the digits.
The fingers were kept warm through the night. At dawn the fingertips were pink and painful. Clear fluid blisters had formed overnight on all four fingers extending from the last joint about two-thirds of the way to the fingertip. The patient took 800 mg ibuprofen every four hours through the night. They rated the pain at 7 on a 1-10 scale.
Before skiing out, you dressed the fingers lightly with gauze and protected them from the cold with two spare socks and one large expedition over-mitten. You began to ski with the hand in a sling and swathe, but this made the patient unbalanced. You completed the ski without the patient falling by allowing their arm hang free to move, but not using a ski pole. The fingers remained warm throughout. The blisters did not grow larger or rupture.
The patient healed well. They eventually lost their fingernails, but no other tissue. They returned to winter camping with a heightened resolve not to tolerate cold fingers or toes.
Stay ready to respond: recertify your WFA, WFR, or WEMT with NOLS.