Dictionary Definition
drown
Verb
1 cover completely or make imperceptible; "I was
drowned in work"; "The noise drowned out her speech" [syn: submerge, overwhelm]
2 get rid of as if by submerging; "She drowned
her trouble in alcohol"
3 die from being submerged in water, getting
water into the lungs, and asphyxiating; "The child drowned in the
lake"
4 kill by submerging in water; "He drowned the
kittens"
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Pronunciation
- droun, /draʊn/, /draUn/
Verb
Derived terms
Translations
- Arabic: gharq غرق
- Chinese: yānmò (淹沒 traditional, 淹没 simplified)
- CJKV Characters: 歾 (mò)
- Czech: utopit
- Dutch: verdrinken
- Finnish: hukkua
- French: se noyer
- German: ertrinken
- Greek: πνίγομαι (pníghome) / πνίγω (pnígho)
- Hebrew: לטבוע (lit'boa)
- Italian: annegarsi
- Japanese: 浸る (hitaru) / 浸す (hitasu)
- Kurdish:
- Sorani: خنکان
- Persian: gharq shodan غرق شدن
- Portuguese: afogar-se
- Russian: потонуть
- Spanish: ahogarse
- Turkish: boğulmak
Extensive Definition
Drowning is death as caused by suffocation
when a liquid causes interruption of the body's absorption of
oxygen from the air leading to asphyxia. The primary cause of
death is hypoxia
and acidosis leading to
cardiac
arrest.
Near drowning is the survival of a drowning event
involving unconsciousness or water inhalation and can lead to
serious secondary complications, including death, after the event.
Cases of near drowning are often given attention by medical
professionals.
Secondary drowning is death due to chemical or biological changes
in the lungs after a near drowning incident.
In many countries, drowning is one of the leading
causes of death for children under 14 years old . Children have
drowned in wading pools and even bath tubs. The rate of drowning in
populations around the world varies widely according to their
access to water, the climate and the national swimming culture. For
example, typically the United Kingdom suffers 450 drownings per
annum or 1 per 150,000 of population whereas the United States
suffers 6,500 drownings or around 1 per 50,000 of population.
Drowning related injuries are the fifth most likely cause of
accidental death in the US. In some regions, drowning is the second
most likely cause of injury and death for children after car
accidents. The rate of near drowning incidents is unknown.
Victims are more likely to be male, young or
adolescent. Surveys indicate that 10% of children under 5 have
experienced a situation with a high risk of drowning. The causes of
drowning cases in the US are as follows:
- 44% are related to swimming
- 17% are related to boating
- 14% are unattributed
- 10% related to scuba diving
- 7% related to car accidents
Drowning risk situations
Most drownings occur in water, 90% in freshwater (rivers, lakes and pools) 10% in seawater, drownings in other fluids are rare and often industrial accidents.Common conditions and risk factors that may lead
to drowning include but are not limited to: (In no particular
order)
- Males are more likely to drown than females, especially in the 18-24 age bracket.
- Failing to wear a PFD when boating.
- Lack of supervision of young children (less than 5 years old).
- Water conditions exceed the swimmer's ability - turbulent or fast water, water out of depth, falling through ice, rip currents, undertows, currents, waves and eddies.
- Entrapment - physically unable to get out of the situation because of a lack of an escape route, snagging or by being hampered by clothing or equipment.
- Impaired judgment and physical incapacitation arising from the use of drugs, principally alcohol.
- Incapacitation arising from the conditions - cold (hypothermia), shock, injury or exhaustion.
- Incapacitation arising from acute illness while swimming - heart attack, seizure or stroke.
- Forcible submersion by another person - murder or misguided children's play.
- Snowmobiling after dark.
- Blackout underwater after rapid breathing to extend a breath-hold dive - shallow water blackout.
- Blackout on ascent from a deep breath-hold dive due to latent hypoxia - deep water blackout.
- Drowning following a car crash or submersion.
People have drowned in as little as 30 mm of
water lying face down, in one case in a wheel rut. Children have
drowned in baths, buckets and toilets; inebriates or those under
the influence of drugs have died in puddles. For a more detailed
list of causes see swimming.
The pathophysiology of drowning
The body's reaction to submersion
Submerging the face in water colder than about triggers the mammalian diving reflex, found in all mammals, and especially in marine mammals such as whales and seals. This reflex protects the body by putting it into energy saving mode to maximize the time it can stay under water. The strength of this reflex is greater in colder water and has three principal effects:- Bradycardia, a slowing of the heart rate of up to 50% in humans.
- Peripheral Vasoconstriction, the restriction of the blood flow to the extremities to increase the blood and oxygen supply to the vital organs, especially the brain.
- Blood Shift, the shifting of blood to the thoracic cavity, the region of the chest between the diaphragm and the neck, to avoid the collapse of the lungs under higher pressure during deeper dives. The reflex action is automatic and allows both a conscious and an unconscious person to survive longer without oxygen under water than in a comparable situation on dry land.
Fresh water vs. Salt Water drowning
Although fresh-water drowning is often associated with aspiration of water into the lungs, the cause of death is not due to either hypoxia or pulmonary edema. When fresh water enters the lungs it is pulled into the pulmonary circulation via the alveoli because of the low capillary hydrostatic pressure and high colloid osmotic pressure. Consequently, the plasma is diluted and the hypotonic environment causes red blood cells to burst (hemolysis). The resulting elevation of plasma K+ level and depression of Na+ level, due to the hemolysis, alter the electrical activity of the heart. Ventricular fibrilation often occurs as a result of these electrolyte changes. Additionally, if drowning occurs in very cold water ( o C), the uptake of cold water into the vascular system can stop the heart. In open heart surgery, the technique of pouring cold saline solution over the heart is used to prevent heart action. If the victim is resucitated death can occur hours later due to renal failure. During hemolysis, hemoglobin is also released into the plasma which can accumulate in the kidneys leading to acute renal failure. In contrast, salt-water drowning does not lead to uptake of inspired water into the vascular system because it is isotonic to blood. Therefore, no red cell hemolysis occurs and the cause of death is asphyxia.The reaction to oxygen deprivation
A conscious victim will hold his or her breath (see Apnea) and will try to access air, often resulting in panic, including rapid body movement. This uses up more oxygen in the blood stream and reduces the time to unconsciousness. The victim can voluntarily hold his or her breath for some time, but the breathing reflex will increase until the victim will try to breathe, even when submerged.The breathing reflex in the human body is weakly
related to the amount of oxygen in the blood but strongly related to the
amount of carbon
dioxide. During apnea, the oxygen in the body is used by the
cells, and
excreted as carbon dioxide. Thus, the level of oxygen in the blood
decreases, and the level of carbon dioxide increases. Increasing
carbon dioxide levels lead to a stronger and stronger breathing
reflex, up to the breath-hold breakpoint, at which the victim can
no longer voluntarily hold his or her breath. This typically occurs
at an arterial partial
pressure of carbon dioxide of 55 mm Hg, but may differ
significantly from individual to individual and can be increased
through training.
The breath-hold break point can be suppressed or
delayed either intentionally or unintentionally. Hyperventilation
before any dive, deep or shallow, flushes out carbon dioxide in the
blood resulting in a dive commencing with an abnormally low carbon
dioxide level; a potentially dangerous condition known as hypocapnia. The level of
carbon dioxide in the blood after hyperventilation may then be
insufficient to trigger the breathing reflex later in the dive and
a blackout may occur without warning and before the diver feels any
urgent need to breathe. This can occur at any depth and is common
in distance breath-hold divers in swimming pools, refer to shallow
water blackout for more detail. Hyperventilation is often used
by both deep and distance free-divers to flush out carbon dioxide
from the lungs to suppress the breathing reflex for longer. It is
important not to mistake this for an attempt to increase the body's
oxygen store. The body at rest is fully oxygenated by normal
breathing and cannot take on any more. Breath holding in water
should always be supervised by a second person, as by
hyperventilating, one increases the risk of shallow water blackout
because insufficient carbon dioxide levels in the blood fail to
trigger the breathing reflex.
The reaction to water inhalation
If water enters the airways of a conscious victim the victim will try to cough up the water or swallow it thus inhaling more water involuntarily. Upon water entering the airways, both conscious and unconscious victims experience laryngospasm, that is the larynx or the vocal cords in the throat constrict and seal the air tube. This prevents water from entering the lungs. Because of this laryngospasm, water enters the stomach in the initial phase of drowning and very little water enters the lungs. Unfortunately, this can interfere with air entering the lungs, too. In most victims, the laryngospasm relaxes some time after unconsciousness and water can enter the lungs causing a "wet drowning". However, about 10-15% of victims maintain this seal until cardiac arrest, this is called "dry drowning" as no water enters the lungs. In forensic pathology water in the lungs indicates that the victim was still alive at the point of submersion; the absence of water in the lungs may be either a dry drowning or indicates a death before submersion.Unconsciousness
A continued lack of oxygen in the brain, hypoxia, will quickly render a victim unconscious usually around a blood partial pressure of oxygen of 25-30mmHg. An unconscious victim rescued with an airway still sealed from laryngospasm stands a good chance of a full recovery. Artificial respiration is also much more effective without water in the lungs. At this point the victim stands a good chance of recovery if attended to within minutes. In most victims the laryngospasm relaxes some time after unconsciousness and water fills the lungs resulting in a wet drowning. Latent hypoxia is a special condition leading to unconsciousness where the partial pressure of oxygen in the lungs under pressure at the bottom of a deep free-dive is adequate to support consciousness but drops below the blackout threshold as the water pressure decreases on the ascent, usually close to the surface as the pressure approaches normal atmospheric pressure. A blackout on ascent like this is called a deep water blackout.Cardiac arrest and death
The brain cannot survive long without oxygen and the continued lack of oxygen in the blood combined with the cardiac arrest will lead to the deterioration of brain cells causing first brain damage and eventually brain death from which recovery is generally considered impossible. A lack of oxygen or chemical changes in the lungs may cause the heart to stop beating; this cardiac arrest stops the flow of blood and thus stops the transport of oxygen to the brain. Cardiac arrest used to be the traditional point of death but at this point there is still a chance of recovery. The brain will die after approximately six minutes without oxygen but special conditions may prolong this (see 'cold water drowning' below). Freshwater contains less salt than blood and will therefore be absorbed into the blood stream by osmosis. In animal experiments this was shown to change the blood chemistry and led to cardiac arrest in 2 to 3 minutes. Sea water is much saltier than blood. Through osmosis water will leave the blood stream and enter the lungs thickening the blood. In animal experiments the thicker blood requires more work from the heart leading to cardiac arrest in 8 to 10 minutes. However, autopsies on human drowning victims show no indications of these effects and there appears to be little difference between drownings in salt water and fresh water. After death rigor mortis will set in and remains for about two days, depending on many factors including water temperature.Secondary drowning
Water, regardless of its salt content, will damage the inside surface of the lung, collapse the alveoli and cause pulmonary edema with a reduced ability to exchange air. This may cause death up to 72 hours after a near drowning incident. This is called secondary drowning. Inhaling certain poisonous vapors or gases will have a similar effect.Rescue and treatment
Many pools and designated bathing areas either have lifeguards, a pool safety camera system for local or remote monitoring, or computer aided drowning detection. However, bystanders play an important role in drowning detection and either intervention or the notification of authorities by phone or alarm. No person should attempt a rescue that is beyond his or her ability or level of training.If a drowning occurs or a swimmer becomes
missing, bystanders should immediately call for help. The lifeguard should be called if
present. If not, emergency
medical services and paramedics should be
contacted as soon as possible.
The first step in rescuing a drowning victim is
to ensure your own safety. Then bring the victim's mouth and nose
above the water surface. For further treatment it is advisable to
remove the victim from the water. Conscious victims may panic and thus hinder rescue
efforts. Often, a victim will cling to the rescuer and try to pull
himself out of the water, submerging the rescuer in the process. To
avoid this, it is recommended that the rescuer approach the
panicking victim with a buoyant object, or from behind,
twisting the victim's arm on the back to restrict movement. If the
victim pushes the rescuer under water, the rescuer should dive
downwards to escape the victim.
Actively drowning victims do not usually call out
for help simply because they lack the air to do so. It is necessary
to breathe to yell. Human physiology does not allow the body to
waste any air when starving for it. They rarely raise their hands
out of the water. They use the surface of the water to push
themselves up in an attempt to get their mouths out of the water.
Lifting arms out of the water always pushes the head down. Head low
in the water, occasionally bobbing up and down is another common
sign of active drowning.
There can be splashing involved during drowning,
usually a butterfly like stroke where the hands barely clear the
waters surface, and sometimes victims can look like they are
climbing an invisible ladder in the water.
Extenuating factors such as increased levels of
stress, secondary injuries, and environmental factors can increase
the likelihood of distress and/or drowning in persons who end up
overboard. It is important that you recognize the behaviors
associated with aquatic distress and drowning, so you can make
informed decisions during emergencies.
Signs or behaviors associated with drowning or
near-drowning:
- Head low in the water, mouth at water level
- Head tilted back with mouth open
- Eyes glassy and empty, unable to focus
- Eyes open, with fear evident on the face
- Hair over forehead or eyes
- Hyperventilating or gasping
- Trying to swim in a particular direction but not making headway
- Trying to roll over on the back to float
- Uncontrollable movement of arms and legs, rarely out of the water.
After successfully approaching the victim,
negatively buoyant objects such as a weight belt are removed. The
priority is then to transport the victim to the water's edge in
preparation for removal from the water. The victim is turned on his
or her back. A secure grip is used to tow panicking victims from
behind, with both rescuer and victim lying on their backs, and the
rescuer swimming a breaststroke kick. A
cooperative victim may be towed in a similar fashion held at the
armpits, and the victim may assist with a breaststroke kick. An
unconscious victim may be pulled in a similar fashion held at the
chin and cheeks, ensuring that the mouth and nose is well above the
water.
There is also the option of pushing a cooperative
victim lying on his or her back with the rescuer swimming on his or
her belly and pushing the feet of the victim, or both victim and
rescuer lying on the belly, with the victim hanging from the
shoulders of the rescuers. This has the advantage that the rescuer
can use both arms and legs to swim breaststroke, but if the victim
pushes his or her head above the water, the rescuer may get pushed
down. This method is often used to retrieve tired swimmers. If the
victim wears lifejacket, buoyancy
compensator, or other flotation device that stabilizes his or
her position with the face up, only one hand of the rescuer is
needed to pull the victim, and the other hand may provide forward
movement or may help in rescue breathing while swimming, using for
example a snorkel.
Special care has to be taken for victims with
suspected spinal injuries, and a back board (spinal board) may be
needed for the rescue. In water,
CPR is ineffective, and the goal should be to bring the victim
to a stable ground quickly and then to start CPR.
If the approach to a stable ground includes the
edge of a pool without steps or the edge of a boat, special
techniques have been developed for moving the victim over the
obstacle. For pools, the rescuer stands outside, holds the victim
by his or her hands, with the victim's back to the edge. The
rescuer then dips the victim into the water quickly to achieve an
upward speed of the body, aiding with the lifting of the body over
the edge. Lifting a victim over the side of a boat may require more
than one person. Special techniques are also used by the coast guard
and military for helicopter rescues.
After reaching dry ground, all victims should be
referred to medical assistance, especially if unconscious or if
even small amounts of water have entered the lungs. An unconscious
victim may need artificial
respiration or CPR.
The Heimlich
manoeuver is not recommended; the technique may have relevance
in situations where airways are obstructed by solids but not
fluids. Performing the manoeuver on drowning victims not only
delays ventilation but may induce vomiting, which if aspirated
will place the patient in a far worse situation. Moreover, the use
of the Heimlich manoeuvre in any choking situation, involving
solids or fluids, has become controversial and is generally no
longer taught. For more information on this debate refer to the
article Henry
Heimlich.
100% oxygen is neither recommended nor
discouraged. Treatment for hypothermia may also be
necessary. Water in the stomach need not be removed, except in the
case of paediatric drownings as a gastric distension can limit
movement of the lungs. Other injuries should also be treated (see
first
aid). Victims that are alert, awake, and intact have nearly a
100% survival rate.
Drowning victims should be treated even if they
have been submerged for a long time. The rule "no patient should be
pronounced dead until warm and dead" applies. Children in
particular have a good chance of survival in water up to 3 minutes,
or 10 minutes in cold water (10 to 15 °C or 50 to 60 °F).
Submersion in cold water can slow the metabolism drastically. There
are rare but documented cases of survivable submersion for extreme
lengths of time. In one case a child named Michelle Funk survived
drowning after being submerged in cold water for 70 minutes. In
another, an 18 year old man survived 38 minutes under water. This
is known as cold water drowning.
Prevention
The reduction of drowning through education and
basic prevention steps, has become a necessity. Training
information can be found through the following organizations Star
Fish Aquatics, Jeff Ellis and Associates, through the local chapter
of then American Red Cross and many other local
organizations.
Training emphasises to help prevent drowning:
- Learn to swim
- Basic water rescue.
- Keep a watch out for others.
- Swim in areas where adequate supervision is present ie a trained and certified Lifeguard.
Common sense around the water to help prevent
Drowning:
- Ensure that boats are reliable, properly loaded and that functional emergency equipment is onboard.
- Wear a properly fitting lifejacket while enjoying water sports such as sailing, surfing or canoeing.
- Pay attention to the weather, tides and water conditions, especially currents. Currents always look weaker from the outside!
- Have a locked fence around swimming pools.
- Consider cold-acclimatisation training for swimming in very cold water.
Emphasis may be needed in these areas to help
prevent drowning:
- Keep children under a watchful eye
- Diving into an unknown depth and or bottom countour area
- Swimming alone
- Swimming at night
- Swimming while under the influence of drugs and or alcohol.
- Using hyperventilation to extend a breath-hold dive, see deep and shallow water blackout
- Relying on swimming aids as they may fail.
- Playing games that will put your life, or others', at risk.
- Diving into water where the bottom cannot clearly be seen or depth determined.
- Walking on ice unless it is known absolutely that the ice is thick enough over the entire route.
- Be aware of your personal limits.
- Swimming in cold water unless first, fully cold-acclimatised and experienced winter swimmer.
As a method of execution
In Europe, drowning was used -- more often than
hanging, even -- as capital punishment, at least for a time. In
fact, during the Middle Ages, a sentence of death was read using
the words "cum fossa et furca," or "with drowning-pit and gallows."
Commonly, women who were convicted of theft were drowned.
Furthermore, drowning was used as a way to determine if a woman was
a witch. The idea was that witches would float and the innocent
would drown. For more details, see trial by
drowning. It is understood that drowning was used as the least
brutal form of execution, and was therefore reserved primarily for
women, although favorable men were executed in this way as
well.
Drowning survived as a method of execution in
Europe until the 17th and 18th centuries. England had abolished the
practice by 1623, Scotland by 1685, Switzerland in 1652, Austria in
1776, Iceland in 1777, and Russia by the beginning of the 1800s.
France revived the practice during the French
Revolution (1789–1799) and was carried out by Jean
Baptiste Carrier at Nantes.
See also
- List of drowning victims
- Medical emergency
- Artificial respiration
- CPR
- Shallow water blackout
- Deep water blackout
- Diver rescue
- Dry drowning
- Pool fence
References
External links
- Drowning prevention information from Seattle Children's Hospital.
- Dr Suzanne Shepherd, Drowning in eMedicine
- Information on search and recovery of drowning victims
- Canadian Red Cross: Drowning Research: Drownings in Canada, 10 Years of Research Module 2 - Ice & Cold Water Immersion, 2006
- Transport Canada Survival in Cold Waters, 2003
- Canadian Lifesaving Society Cannadian National Drowning Report (1991-2000)
drown in Arabic: غرق
drown in Czech: Tonutí
drown in German: Ertrinken
drown in Spanish: Ahogamiento
drown in French: Noyade
drown in Scottish Gaelic: Bàthadh
drown in Hebrew: טביעה (בעל חיים)
drown in Korean: 익사
drown in Italian: Annegamento
drown in Dutch: Verdrinking
drown in Japanese: 水死
drown in Norwegian: Drukning
drown in Polish: Utonięcie
drown in Portuguese: Afogamento
drown in Russian: Утопление
drown in Simple English: Drowning
drown in Slovenian: Utopitev
drown in Finnish: Hukkuminen
drown in Swedish: Drunkning
Synonyms, Antonyms and Related Words
OD,
asphyxiate, baptize, be clobbered, be
felled, be killed, be poleaxed, be staggered, be stricken, bottle
up, burke, bury, censor, choke, choke off, clamp down on,
come to grief, cork, cork
up, crack down on, crush,
damp down, deluge,
dip, douse, drench, duck, dunk, engulf, extinguish, famish, float, flood, flow on, founder, gag, garrote, have a mishap, hold
down, immerge, immerse, inundate, jump on, keep down,
keep under, kill, knock
over, merge, muzzle, overcome, overflow, overpower, overwhelm, plunge in water,
pour on, pour water on, prostrate, put down, quash, quell, quench, rain, repress, run aground, shut down
on, silence, sink, sit down on, sit on, sluice, smash, smother, soak, sop, souse, squash, squelch, stanch, starve, stifle, stop the breath, strangle, stultify, subdue, submerge, submerse, suffer a misfortune,
suffocate, suppress, swamp, throttle, wet, whelm