Sunday, February 26, 2023

Wet Feet! ... Immersion Foot!? Part One©

 


Last week we talked about how to dry your boots, this week we will talk about what will happen to your feet if you don’t!

 


The more things change, the more they stay the same, and if your socks, sandals, shoes, boots, or moccasins get wet, your feet get wet, and if your feet stay wet for an extended period, you risk “immersion foot”!  

 

Immersion foot can strike in the summer or winter, in cold or warm climates, it is a medical term that is used to describe three related traumas, all of which start when some part of you has been wet for a long time.  All three maladies are different, but they all share some similarities, too.  All have occurred for as long as people have gotten their feet wet and have all been called by many names over the centuries.  And don’t forget immersion foot isn’t just a problem of the feet, although that is the body part that is most affected, it can impact your hands, ankles, and buttocks, too! 

 

All members of this cluster of maladies, have the following related symptoms, which will appear in the following order.

 

A mild case of immersion foot showing maceration, from Wikimedia HERE.


First, a pruning or softening of the skin, known medically as maceration, will appear.  This wrinkling, which can be mild to severe, is caused by hyperhydration of the skin layers.  The skin will appear pale or white and wrinkled.  Second, is the separation of the dermal layers, the epidermis from the dermis, especially in people who have thick, heavy callouses in the affected areas.  And third, the affected areas will display tenderness, swelling, blisters, and skin abrasions, or raw spots, over any pressure points. 

 

All immersion foot injuries start with being wet; warm-wet or cold-wet, either from sweat or immersion, AND with waterlogging, or hyperhydration, of your skin.  However ,what separates them into two distinct groups is temperature, warm versus cold, because cold-wet can reduce the blood supply to the skin, and once the blood supply has been reduced for long enough, the skin will begin to die.

 

Once you understand this difference, you will be able to diagnose trench foot” which is a non-freezing cold injury (NFCI), from the other two types of immersion foot, “warm water immersion foot” (WWIF) , and its second stage “tropical immersion foot” (TIF)1.

 

Immersion Foot ... Trench Foot!

 

From “Nonfreezing cold water (trench foot) and warm water immersion injuries”, by Ken Zafren, MD, HERE.


Trench foot2, is a non-freezing cold injury (NFCI), caused by exposure to wet and cold, but not necessarily freezing, conditions, of 32° to 59°F (0° to 15°C) over a period two to three days, or even longer.  It can occur much faster, in as little as 14 to 22 hours, if your feet have been continuously immersed in 32° to 46°F (0° to 8°C) temperature water, however. 

 

But it isn’t only continuous immersion in cold water that leads to trench foot, it can be caused by the prolonged wearing of damp or wet socks and footwear in cold conditions.  Wet clothing cools the feet very rapidly, and as the feet cool, the small arteries supplying blood to the feet and ankles constrict (vasoconstriction) and reduce circulation by approximately 10%3.  Blood flow to the feet can also be reduced by inactivity, particularly when the feet are below the level of the heart.  The reduced circulation deprives the feet of oxygen, warmth and nutrition and the cells begin to die.  At first, only the skin and tissues immediately below the skin are affected, however if the feet are not dried and rewarmed, even the deeper tissues of the feet can be injured.  Wearing tight socks or boots can further impede circulation and worsen the condition, particularly when the feet begin to swell. 

 

Most victims of non-freezing cold injuries (NFCIs), besides being exposed to cold and wet conditions, have also been subjected to fatigue, malnutrition, periods of limited movement, and have been wearing the same boots or shoes constantly for many days.  Among civilians, those at risk for NFCI are hikers, homeless people, shipwreck survivors, who are immersed in cold water or aboard lifeboats, and survivors of wilderness accidents, like plane crashes or capsized boats, who must survive in wet clothes and boots.

 


Symptoms of trench foot are a pruning of the skin, although with less maceration than with WWIF of TIF4, numbness as if the foot was a block of wood, and when rewarmed, itching or pain, which is sometimes described as a burning feeling.  The feet swell and first turn red, then white, and when rewarmed, turn a mottled pale blue. 

 

Immersion Foot ... WWIF and TIF!

 


Warm water immersion foot, (WWIF) appears after a constant exposure to warm-wet conditions over one to three days.  By the end
of the third day of exposure, it is nearly guaranteed, that a person will be affected to some degree or another with warm water immersion foot 5.  Typically, it takes three or more days of constant exposure to warm-wet conditions, to advance to the second, more serious stage, of warm water immersion foot, which is tropical immersion foot (TIF).  Both are caused by the waterlogging, or hyperhydration of the skin, through exposure to water between 59oF to 90oF (15o C to 32oC).  Tropical immersion foot is caused by the passage of water through the compromised outer layer of skin, the epidermis, into inner layer of skin, or the dermis6. 

 

Just like trench foot, WWIF and its second stage TIF, can be caused both by constant immersion in water, or by wearing wet or damp socks and boots for a prolonged time, in warm conditions.  For example, a hiker, walking in wet boots and socks for a week in 60o to 80oF (15o to 27oC) was diagnosed with TIF and an enlisted nurse working at a United States Airforce base, working 12 hour shifts, where she wore the same combat boots daily, for two weeks, was diagnosed with “boot foot” a non-immersion variant of WWIF7. 

 


The earliest symptom of WWIF is hyperhydration and pruning of the soles of the feet, which become pale, white, tingling, or painful, which victims describe as feeling like “walking on a rope8.  TIF is characterized by a burning pain, which is more severe on the top, or dorsal surface, than on the bottom of the foot.  Other symptoms are a redness affecting the feet, particularly on the tops, and the ankles, with swelling, or edema, and a sensitivity to touch all over the affected area.  Walking becomes increasingly difficult and painful and if the victim takes off their boots to examine their feet, they won’t be able to put them back on, due to the swelling.  Small skin abrasions, or raw spots, over pressure points are also commonly found with TIF.

 

Now that we know how to diagnose which type of immersion foot we are presented with, whether it is trench foot (NFCI), warm water immersion foot (WWIF) or tropical immersion foot (TIF), by observing whether we have been exposed to warm-wet or cold-wet conditions and by observing the maceration of the skin and other symptoms, we can work to prevent or manage the condition so that we don’t end up in the hospital with permanent, ongoing issues.

 

For more about immersion foot, read “Accidental Lessons … Boots Freeze!©”, HERE, “Survival Tips From Jack London, Part One©”, HERE, and “Winter Survival for Tommy...Part Two©”, HERE.

 

Don’t forget to come back next week and read “Wet Feet! ... Immersion Foot!? Part Two©”, where we will talk about how to prevent and manage and treat immersion foot!

 


I hope that you continue to enjoy The Woodsman’s Journal Online and look for me on YouTube at BandanaMan Productions for other related videos, HERE.  Don’t forget to follow me on both The Woodsman’s Journal Online, HERE, and subscribe to BandanaMan Productions on YouTube.  If you have questions, as always, feel free to leave a comment on either site.  I announce new articles on Facebook at Eric Reynolds, on Instagram at bandanamanaproductions, and on VK at Eric Reynolds, so watch for me.

 

That is all for now, and as always, until next time, Happy Trails!

 

 

Notes

 

1 For an excellent article on immersion foot and the other related maladies, read “Maceration, Immersion Foot and Backpacking”, by Ryan Jordan, HERE.

 

2 A French army doctor first described immersion foot, in 1812, but the name “trench foot was first coined in the trenches of World War One, during the early 20th century and it continued to be used to describe NFCI injuries that were experienced by Allied soldiers on the European Front of World War Two.  It has also been called “sea boot foot” or “bridge foot”, because it afflicted sailors standing four hour watch during World War Two, while remaining relatively motionless and wearing rubber sea boots.

 

3 From “Nonfreezing cold water (trench foot) and warm water immersion injuries”, by Ken Zafren, MD.

 

4 From “Maceration, Immersion Foot and Backpacking”, by Ryan Jordan”

 

5 From Internal Medicine in Vietnam: Skin Diseases in Vietnam, 1965-72, Vol. I, by Lt Col. Alfred M. Allen, page 115.

 

6 From “Nonfreezing cold water (trench foot) and warm water immersion injuries”, by Ken Zafren, MD., “My Feet Are Killing Me: A Hiker’s Journey”, by Neil McCormack, MD., and Cindy Carol Bitter, MD, MPH., and Internal Medicine in Vietnam: Skin Diseases in Vietnam, 1965-72, Vol. I, by Lt Col. Alfred M. Allen, page 109.

 

7 From “My Feet Are Killing Me: A Hiker’s Journey”, by Neil McCormack, MD., and Cindy Carol Bitter, MD, MPH., and “‘Boot foot’ with pseudomonas colonization”, by Brett Sloan, MD’, and Jeffrey J. Meffert, MD

 

8 From Internal Medicine in Vietnam: Skin Diseases in Vietnam, 1965-72, Vol. I, by Lt Col. Alfred M. Allen, page 105.

 

 

Sources

 

Allen, Alfred M., Lt Col.; Internal Medicine in Vietnam: Skin Diseases in Vietnam, 1965-72, Vol. I, [Office of the Surgeon General and Center of Military History, Washington, D.C., 1977], p 102-117, https://books.google.com/books?id=Quw5DlbHKt0C&pg=PR17&dq=Internal+Medicine+in+Vietnam:+Skin+Diseases+in+Vietnam,+1965-72&hl=en&newbks=1&newbks_redir=0&sa=X&ved=2ahUKEwiw1cjXjqP9AhWID1kFHf7qBEoQ6AF6BAgEEAI#v=onepage&q=Internal%20Medicine%20in%20Vietnam%3A%20Skin%20Diseases%20in%20Vietnam%2C%201965-72&f=false, accessed 2/19/2023

 

Jordan, Ryan; “Maceration, Immersion Foot and Backpacking”, September 15, 2019, [© Beartooth Media Group Inc.], https://backpackinglight.com/maceration-immersion-foot-and-backpacking/, accessed February 21, 2023

 

McCormack, Neil MD., and Bitter, Cindy Carol MD., MPH., “My Feet Are Killing Me: A Hiker’s Journey”, Wilderness & Environmental Medicine 2020; June 2020, Volume 31, Issue 2, pages 245 – 246, https://www.wemjournal.org/article/S1080-6032(20)30009-0/fulltext#articleInformation, accessed February 17, 2022


Sloan, Brett MD., and Meffert, Jeffrey J., MD.; “‘Boot foot’ with pseudomonas colonization”, Journal of American Academy of Dermatology, Volume 52, Issue 6, June 2005, page1109 - 1110, https://www.jaad.org/article/S0190-9622(05)00986-2/fulltext, accessed February 25, 2023


United States Army, “Baby Your Feet”, Army Talks, Vol. III, No. 5, February 10, 1945, page 7-9, 18, http://www.90thidpg.us/Reference/Army%20Talks/foxhole.pdf, accessed January 18, 2023


United States Army Medical Service; Cold Injury, Ground Type, in World War II, Medical Department of the United States Army in World War II, [The Office of the Surgeon General, Washington, D.C., 1958],page 123-124, https://books.google.com/books?id=FGcwAAAAIAAJ&pg=PA122&lpg=PA122&dq=%22War+Department+Circular+No.+312.+section+IV,+dated+22+July+1944%22&source=bl&ots=BA1svMxtQ9&sig=ACfU3U1mOBWMsSPXvQ1GCQ2N3WQGQb4yYQ&hl=en&sa=X&ved=2ahUKEwi0sOnI7vr8AhV4QjABHdSEBrwQ6AF6BAgIEAM#v=onepage&q=%22War%20Department%20Circular%20No.%20312.%20section%20IV%2C%20dated%2022%20July%201944%22&f=false, accessed February 3, 2023


Zafren, Ken, MD.; “Nonfreezing cold water (trench foot) and warm water immersion injuries”, [© 2023 UpToDate, Inc., updated October 26, 2022], https://www.uptodate.com/contents/nonfreezing-cold-water-trench-foot-and-warm-water-immersion-injuries#:~:text=NFCI%20or%20frostbite%20can%20usually,to%20cold%20or%20warm%20water, accessed February 17, 2023

 


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