freezing vs non freezing cold injuries
| 
 | non freezing cold injuries | 
| formation of ice crystals in tissue | caused by slow temperature decrease in affected tissue with hypothermia, no direct frostbite | 
| tissue damage is immediate | alternating phases of vasoconstriction and vasodilation in protracted hypothermia | 
| direct damage of entire tissue by formation of ice crystals | incomplete damage of tissue, nerve fibers react at early stage | 
| course often very protracted, complete recovery rare | four clinical phases | 
| blister formation in stages II and III | blister formation rare | 
| rewarming in warm water (37 to 39 °C) for 15 to 60 min | slow rewarming | 
| sterile und protective bandages, topical antiseptics as required, splinting of affected extremities | slight loading of the affected area possible, no bandaging necessary | 
Reference:
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