Medical treatment may involve passive rewarming, warming intravenous infusions, blood rewarming, and the irrigation of the lungs and abdomen with warm salt water.

This may happen in a number of situations, such as when someone is out in cold weather for too long or falls into icy water. People who are wet will lose body heat faster than those who are dry. Similarly, windy conditions can steal heat away from the body faster than in still conditions. People with severe injury also are at risk for hypothermia.

To do this:

Move the person out of the cold, ideally to a dry, warm location. If you can’t get indoors, shield the person from the cold and wind, keeping him or her in a horizontal position so that the blood can circulate more freely. Remove wet clothing.  Cut away the clothing if you need to and immediately cover the person with dry blankets or coats. Be sure to cover the person’s head, leaving the face exposed. Insulate the person from the cold ground if you are unable to get indoors. Use blankets, sleeping bags, or whatever clothing you may have on hand. Call 911.  If the person’s breathing has stopped or is abnormally low, or the pulse is very weak, begin CPR if you have been trained to do so.

To do so safely:

Be gentle. Avoid rubbing the person aggressively.  Someone who has experienced severe exposure will often have an irregular heart rate. Jarring, moving, or massaging the person vigorously may trigger cardiac arrest. Give warming drinks. Do so only if the person is alert and able to swallow. Provide warm, sweet, non-caffeinated beverages. Avoid alcohol of any sort as this will only cool the body even further. Use warm, dry compresses, ideally a first aid instant warming compress (a plastic bag that heats up when squeezed), a dryer-warmed towel, or electric heating pad set on low. Avoid intense heat of any sort.  This includes a blow heater, radiant heater, or a hot water bath. Overheating the skin can lead to tissue damage or, even worse, trigger potentially deadly arrhythmia (irregular heartbeats). Avoid warming the arms or legs as this forces the cold back to the heart, lungs, and brain, further lowering the body temperature and increasing the risk of organ failure. Instead, focus the attention primarily on the chest, groin, and neck where the major arteries are located.

Passive External Rewarming

Passive external rewarming (PER) is typically used to treat mild hypothermia. It simply involves placing the individual in an appropriately warm environment, covered in insulation, and gradually raising the core body temperature a few degrees every hour.

Active Core Rewarming

PER cannot be used if a person’s temperature drops below 86 degrees. It is at this stage that spontaneous shivering will stop and the body will no longer be able to increase the temperature on its own. By that point, the heart will be unstable and the use of external heat will only increase the risk of arrhythmia.  

There are several ways this can be done:

Feeding warm, humidified air into the lung with an oxygen mask or breathing tube Administering warm fluids intravenously (into a vein) Irrigating the abdomen (peritoneal cavity) or the space around the lungs (pleura) with warm salt water every 20 to 30 minutes Administering warm fluids into the bladder with a Foley catheter Rewarming the blood with a hemodialysis machine or a heart bypass machine Using diathermy, a technique in which low-frequency microwave radiation can deliver heat to deeper tissues

Treatment Follow-Up

Generally speaking, someone with hypothermia is released home after treatment is complete if his or her body temperature was above 89.9 degrees at the time of diagnosis.