Commercial
Supported by
A Missouri hospital stated the amputations concerned principally fingers and toes after a recreation in January when temperatures have been beneath zero.
A number of followers of the Kansas Metropolis Chiefs who attended a playoff recreation on a bitterly chilly January day in Missouri suffered frostbite that required amputations, based on the hospital that handled them.
Twelve individuals — together with some soccer followers who have been at Arrowhead Stadium on Jan. 13 — needed to bear amputations involving principally fingers and toes, the hospital, Analysis Medical Middle in Kansas Metropolis, stated in an announcement on Saturday.
The middle stated it handled dozens of sufferers who skilled frostbite throughout an 11-day chilly snap. Not all the sufferers who had amputations attended the Chiefs recreation. Some have been individuals who labored outside within the excessive chilly, the hospital stated.
The precise variety of followers who attended the sport who had amputations was unclear. The hospital stated there was some overlap among the many followers and people who had additionally labored outside.
The hospital additionally famous that signs of frostbite can develop slowly, and that most of the frostbite sufferers it handled couldn’t determine when their accidents occurred — when their ache, numbness and different signs started.
The hospital stated it was a file variety of frostbite sufferers for the reason that burn heart opened 11 years in the past.
We’re having hassle retrieving the article content material.
Please allow JavaScript in your browser settings.
Thanks on your persistence whereas we confirm entry. In case you are in Reader mode please exit and log into your Occasions account, or subscribe for all of The Occasions.
Thanks on your persistence whereas we confirm entry.
Already a subscriber? Log in.
Need all of The Occasions? Subscribe.
Commercial