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    Over 65 and not worried about heat? You should be

    CHICAGO (AP) — This week's heat wave may be uncomfortable, but you're healthy, active and feel just fine. So what if you're over 65? Think again. Feeling good doesn't mean you're safe.

    There are changes in an older person that raise the risk for heat stroke and other problems. An older body contains far less water than a younger one. Older brains can't sense temperature changes as well, and they don't recognize thirst as easily.

    Blistering summer heat is an underappreciated killer, claiming by some estimates as many as 1,000 U.S. lives each year — more than any other type of weather.

    One federal study found 40 percent of heat-related deaths were in people 65 and older. Those numbers could be lower if more heeded heat warnings aimed at seniors. Yet research has shown many people over 65 don't think the warnings apply to them — because they don't think they're "old."

    Don Worden is 79 and an avid tennis buff who prefers playing doubles on outdoor courts along Chicago's lakefront — even in oppressive 90-degree temperatures like those hitting the Midwest this week.

    "I don't pay too much attention to those" warnings, Worden said. "I stay in pretty good shape, and I don't feel they apply to me."

    Worden said he drinks a lot of water and would stop a match if he started feeling effects from the heat, "but that hasn't happened."

    Scott Sheridan, who studies the effects of heat and climate on health at Kent State University, researched how people over 65 view heat warnings. In his 2006 study of more than 900 people, he found about 70 percent knew about advice to drink plenty of water on very hot days, avoid outdoor activities and stay inside with air conditioning. But only about half said they followed the advice.

    "People well into their 70s would say old people should watch out but not them," he said. "People just didn't want to be thought of in that same category."

    Dr. David Zich, an emergency medicine specialist at Northwestern Memorial Hospital, said he has colleagues in medicine that age who shun being thought of as "elderly." But those heat warnings apply to them, too.

    As Dr. William Dale, geriatrics chief at the University of Chicago Medical Center explains it, "Any older adult has less reserve and is more likely to become dehydrated than others, just because their overall body water goes down with age no matter how healthy you are."

    The amount of water in the body declines with aging, from about 80 percent in young adulthood to about 55 to 60 percent for people in their 80s, Dale said.

    Temperature sensors in the brain become less sensitive as people age, so the body doesn't get the same signals to drink water in hot weather, and older people often don't feel thirsty even when they need to replenish, Dale said.

    They also may not feel the typical symptoms of dehydration, such as headache or dizziness. Some complain of just feeling "bad" and think they're getting sick, he said.

    Conditions were ripe for those types of complaints Tuesday as a dense dome of hot air remained parked over much of the nation's midsection, raising temperatures into the mid- to upper-90s from the Texas Gulf Coast to the Rockies and the northern Plains. Tropical-level humidity raised the heat index in many places to nearly 120 degrees.

    In South Dakota, up to 1,500 head of cattle died across the state from the heat. And in eastern Iowa, the scorching sun caused a portion of Interstate 380 to buckle. The weather also sent dozens of people to hospitals, canceled outdoor sporting events and caused sporadic power outages.

    In such conditions, dehydration can lead to heat exhaustion and potentially deadly heat stroke. During a heat wave, that can happen in a matter of hours in older people if they over-exert themselves, don't drink enough water or are frail and don't get out of uncooled homes, said Dr. Chris Carpenter, an emergency medicine physician at Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis.

    Heat exhaustion can cause muscle cramps, low blood pressure, rapid pulse and nausea. It can be treated at home, by drinking water, getting into an air-conditioned room or sitting in front of a fan and misting the body with cool water.

    But affected people should be monitored for mental changes and to make sure their temperature does not rise above 102 because the condition can quickly lead to heat stroke. A medical emergency, heat stroke involves temperatures of 104 or higher and can cause seizures, loss of consciousness and death.

    Medicines many older people take also may make them more vulnerable to the heat. These include diuretics for high blood pressure, which increase urination — and make it more important to drink plenty of water, Dale said.

    Some types of drugs can interfere with sweating and raise body temperature, including some medicines for insomnia, nausea, prostate conditions, Parkinson's disease and even Benadryl. Many list "dry mouth" as a side effect — a tip-off to drink more water, Zich said.

    There aren't specific guidelines on how much water older people should drink in a heat wave.

    Dale said he generally tells his older patients to drink a quart of water throughout the day, and to drink even if they don't feel thirsty.

    Doctors also advise older patients to avoid alcohol and coffee during extreme heat because they can cause the body to lose fluid and contribute to dehydration.

    ___

    AP Medical Writer Lindsey Tanner can be reached at http://www.twitter.com/LindseyTanner .

     

    131 comments

    • Victor  •  10 mths ago
      even infants are not heat proof. please don't forget them in the car.
      • Jim 10 mths ago
        Infants and children are even more susceptible to heat since their bodies cannot sweat as well as adults so their heat dissipation is much more limited.
      • Kundan Sahu 10 mths ago
        neharu nagar
    • Howie  •  10 mths ago
      You always get older but you do not have to get old.
      • kerryb 10 mths ago
        You young man have never grown old! Hopefully you will live long enough to do so. Aging is a game of give backs that no one, but no one, can avoid. But I like you attitude.
    • BigDog  •  10 mths ago
      Makes you wonder what people did before there was air conditioning. Even though we are living longer lives now, they had to be tougher than us.
      • robert 10 mths ago
        Most of them never reached the age of 50 nevermind into the 60's or 70's
      • NancyS 10 mths ago
        My father, a physician, says every heat wave harvested 65's and older in the 30's and 40's. Air conditioning is a blessing for us older folks.
      • Victor 10 mths ago
        Tougher? What is your definition of "toughness"? Suffer more and live less?
    • Pat  •  10 mths ago
      What if you are old and can't afford an air conditioner and, even if you had one, can't afford the electric bill.
      • Sissy 10 mths ago
        If you can't afford the air conditioner - get a doctor's note and take it to your electric company. They may give you a reduced rate because you need to keep
        your home cooled because of a medical condition.
      • Michael J 10 mths ago
        Then you may have voted GOP and got a Bagger who wants to take away all of your support from Social Security, Medicare and Medicaid.
      • Any Mouse 10 mths ago
        Our electric bill was over $350 because of the air conditioner. In mild months our bill is arounf $120. We've been running the A/C for 3 weeks now and they are predicting at leat another month of this heat. I'm on Social Security and won't be able to pay the full electic bill next payday or the following one. Only be able to pay about $300. At least, here, they can't turn off your electric if you're over 65 unless you stop paying anything and try to catch up as you can by paying more than the bill in cooler months. (Applies for heating during the winter too.)
    • JAMES  •  10 mths ago
      A word of caution is good advise, as a senior the heat does deserve more caution.
      • Comments 10 mths ago
        I have a wealthy friend who is a senior, and hardly will ever use her air conditioner. So she complains.
      • Larryntx 10 mths ago
        James, I am 68 and agree. But, this article's good advice "broadbrushes" a whole classification of people as all being bumbling idiots who don't know when to go cool off. Everything in this article can apply to each and every person, not just the older generation.
      • ILuvCats 10 mths ago
        I don't agree with you Larry. My husband is 72 and I had to plead with him to only work outside a couple hours in the AM, then do chores inside with the A/C when it got hot. He isn't an idiot, he is tough and apparently doesn't think he is old.
    • Comments  •  10 mths ago
      I am over 65. I don't cool off like I used to. My body seems to stay hot if I've been out in heat. Even if I drink water and get in water to cool off. I stay indoors in air conditioning as much as possible
    • Comments  •  10 mths ago
      It' s wrong that the cattle who died did not have lots of trees to be under. Mabye they were just out in the baking sun hour after hour. When animals have no shade, they can't cool off.
      Pastures should have trees. I bet they had none.
    • Cowboy  •  10 mths ago
      I just heard an interview of and 85 year old gentleman who had lost all he had in the outbreak of tornadoes in Alabama on our local News channel. The question was ask "was he worried because he had lost everything". Here is his remarkable answer " I told my wife before she passed away a few years ago that I have never heard of one worry that had solved a problem. and I am not going to worry about it now. You just have to deal with what hand you are dealt and go on with it". That's the way we have to handle the heat. Take care of yourself and not worry about it along with a lot of other thing that are going on in today's society.
    • sam  •  10 mths ago
      Seems to me that folks that are under 65 should be more concerned. If 40% of heat related deaths are in folks over 65, I guess that means 60% of the deaths are in people under 65? lol One thing for sure, figures don;t lie but liers sure figure. :-)
    • KC  •  10 mths ago
      This heat has been bad to be so early in the summer
    • George  •  10 mths ago
      Learned all this in the Boy Scouts
    • Jay  •  10 mths ago
      Just plain common sense.
    • George  •  10 mths ago
      Lindsay -
      I see that you have found an inane subject to get your name on the internet. You implication that retirees are incapable of caring for themselves is patronizing, to say the least. What is next, reporting on some government agency study explaining how people over 65 should brush their teeth more frequently to avoid gingivitis and tooth decay?
    • anon  •  10 mths ago
      Does this author think that the older generation is stupid. I am not over 65, but come on, a little common sense. Oh my what did people do before air conditioners They had fans and drank alot of water and slowed down in the heat of the day.
    • WYZ1  •  10 mths ago
      Lindsey, please stop patronizing us. We knew this when we were seven years old and you were yet to be a twinkle in your daddy's eye. Some of us may be forgetting a few things now and then, but we know to get in out of the heat and drink water when we get dry.
    • Buck-a-toddy  •  10 mths ago
      Sure it's hot. I'm 64, overweight, and thrive standing in the sun on the Gulf of Mexico while deep sea fishing. Up at 430AM to catch a boat, stand and crank snapper up with my younger buds, etc., for 8 hours, then go kill a few martini's before supper. If heat is gonna do me in it will have to wipe the smile off my face, first.... Been doin' it for decades. Get off the couch and go have some fun! You'll be glad you did! Oh, and don't worry about politics; it won't do you any good!
    • Guest  •  10 mths ago
      The heat can be dangerous over 65yrs old or not, the value of simple water cannot be underestimated.
    • David1  •  10 mths ago
      I may not hold water like I used to but the beer is not a problem at all.
    • Denis  •  10 mths ago
      Hell, I'm about to turn 65 and I've always done the same things. What's the big deal about dying anyway, it's inevitable. If I can't live the way that I want to then I don't want to live. What a bunch of cry babies. Give me liberty or give me death.
    • Zombie Birdhouse  •  10 mths ago
      Heat stroke and other health problems do not have age groups.
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