• Management

    1. Prehospital / Resuscitation (ABCs):
      • Hypoxic arrest is primary mechanism; prioritize airway & oxygenation.
      • Initiate rescue breathing ASAP (even in water).
      • C-spine immobilization only if trauma is suspected (routine use delays airway mgmt).
      • Remove wet clothing, initiate active rewarming if hypothermic.
    2. Mild/Asymptomatic (Normal SpO2, clear lungs, normal GCS):
      • Observe for 4-8 hours in ED.
      • If clinical exam & SpO2 remain normal, safe to discharge.
    3. Symptomatic (Resp distress, SpO2 <95%, abnormal CXR):
      • Supplemental O2.
      • Non-invasive ventilation (CPAP/BiPAP) or Intubation with high PEEP if severe (treats underlying ARDS/surfactant washout).
    4. Refractory/Special Considerations:
      • Target SpO2 94-98%.
      • High-Yield NegativeDO NOT give empiric antibiotics or systemic corticosteroids (no proven benefit, may cause harm). Abx reserved for documented subsequent infection (fever/infiltrates > 72 hrs post-submersion).
  • Complications

    • ARDS: Due to aspiration-induced surfactant washout and alveolar capillary membrane injury.
    • Hypoxic-Ischemic Encephalopathy (HIE): Primary determinant of long-term morbidity/mortality.
    • Pneumonia: Typically late (>48-72 hrs). Pathogens depend on water source (e.g., Aeromonas hydrophilaPseudomonasBurkholderia in freshwater/stagnant water).
    • Arrhythmias: V-fib or bradycardia secondary to hypoxemia or severe hypothermia.