A handful of studies focusing on firefighters’ cardiac responses to stress show within 15 seconds after an alarm sounds, heart rates soar 61 beats per minute on average. While resting, our heart beats about 60 to 70 times each minute. Therefore, the heart rate nearly doubles within 15 seconds of an alarm. Athletes in training usually get 15 minutes of warm-ups to raise heart beats that high.
An analysis of data in those studies shows:
- Firefighting raises the threshold for heart attacks, ischemia/angina and stroke;
- Age is a significant factor in heart attacks, but not the only one;
- Alarm systems, or Klaxons, may well contribute over time to heart trouble;
- Alarms provide just as stressful when false as when real;
- Firefighters arrive at emergencies with heart pumping at 88 percent of capacity. In other words, systolic pressure, indicating the pressure during the heart’s initial contraction (the upper number of a blood-pressure reading) remains at 80 to 100 percent capacity until the emergency ends, sometimes hours later;
- We need more studies to address health issues facing firefighters, particularly cardiovascular fitness.
Figure 3: Age and Cause of Death (1996)
Barnard concurred, saying repeated exposures to such pollutants may correlate with a higher incidence of ischemia in firefighters. CO exposure also seems to reduce the threshold for chest pain, also referred to as angina, which is a temporary lack of blood supply to the heart. Angina causes weakness and shortness of breath, and though it usually only mimics the symptoms of a heart attack, it can be a precursor to one.13 Long-term effects remain under debate, but it seems certain the effects cannot be positive.
The cardiovascular system gears up for physical activity at the sound of the Klaxon, but often no activity takes place. When an emergency worker’s body primes for battle and doesn’t follow through, the results are harmful.14
This repeated cycle, combined with the other exertions, place extreme stress on the heart and could result in myocardial ischemia. While normally insignificant, it’s the most commonly found cardiac condition in firefighters, usually accompanied by a rapid increase in heart rate. It signals a reduced blood supply to the heart; happening only occasionally in the non-firefighting population, this situation usually does no harm. The preparation for maximal exertion when no such effort takes place, or even maintaining the high level of heart rate for long periods of time, is particularly suspect where we are involved. Barnard supports this hypothesis, saying excessive catecholamines, hormones released during stress, may lead to the premature hardening of the arteries (atherosclerosis).15
Specific Risk Factors
Does the perceived gung-ho attitude of less-experienced firefighters evoke a higher increase in heart rate than in more experienced crews? Neither the Barnard nor the Helsinki study found substantial correlation.
One might suspect that out-of-shape firefighters would experience higher pulse rates after an alarm sounds than their fitter counterparts. But the Helsinki study found fitter firefighters actually had higher peaks. The authors attributed this partly to the ability of the fitter firefighters to get to the trucks more quickly, but they show no evidence to support this notion. It simply may come down to the individual response to an alarm.
Two studies questioned what effect the type of alarm system had on firefighters’ conditioned response. The Helsinki study suggested the Klaxon should “not strive for a physiological alarm reaction, but should be more informative.”16 Barnard and Duncan also questioned the alarm system, asking whether there was a difference between the old fashioned bell and the modern tone system. Both studies content that we know little about the impact of Klaxons, and that we could gain much by studying alarm systems further.
So many questions remain unanswered about cardiac responses to firefighting, in part, because of the variables that are hard to isolate in a true emergency. As Mark Sothmann pointed out in a Journal of Medicine article: “Although simulations generally are validated to replicate the type of tasks firefighters perform, at present there is little information on the comparability of simulations and actual emergencies in terms of intensity or duration of cardiorespiratory response.”17
Clearly, more studies on this subject are imperative. Health issues faced by firefighters, particularly those cardiac in nature, demand our attention.
About the Author
Garrett Law is a senior at Harvard College, majoring in history of science. He undertook this project as a research paper for a human physiology class. He is currently writing his senior thesis on fire sprinkler technology and development. Born in Sherrill, N.Y., he has been a firefighter with the Sherrill Kenwood Volunteer Fire Department for four years and a member of the ambulance crew this past year. He is a fourth-generation firefighter who is rebuilding a 1943 GMC pumper he bought when he was 13.
Sources
- “1996 Firefighter Injury Report.” NFPA Journal, November/December: p. 68, 1997.
- “Firefighter Fatalities in the United States in 1998.” United States Fire Administration. August: p 14, 1999.
- Ibid
- Barnard J, Duncan H: “Heart Rate and ECG responses of fire fighters.” Journal of Occupational Medicine. 17(4): p. 247, 1975.
- Kuorinka, I., Korhonen, O: “Firefighters’ reaction to alarm: Helsinki firefighters.” Journal of Occupational Medicine, 23(11): p. 764, 1981.
- Sothmann, Mark., with Saaupe K., Jasenof D., Blaney J. “Heart Rate Response of firefighters to Actual Emergencies; Implications for Cardiorespiratory Fitness.” Journal of Medicine. Vol. 34(8) p 797, 1992.
- Manning J, Griggs. T: “Heart rates in fire fighters using breathing equipment; similar near-maximal exertion in response to multiple work load conditions.” Journal of Occupational Medicine.” 25: pp. 215-218, 1983.
- Kuorinka et al. p. 764.
- Kuorinka et al. p. 762.
- Duncan H., Gardner G., Barnard J: “Physiological responses of men working in fire fighting equipment in the heat.” Ergonomics. 22: pp. 521-527, 1979.
- Lovett, E. Harvard University science teaching fellow in cardiology: Interview: April 12, 1998.
- Guidotti L: “Human factors in firefighting: ergonomic, cardiopulmonary, and psychogenic stress-related issues.” Occupational and Environmental Health. 64: p. 5, 1992.
- Ibid, p. 4.
- Gerspach J, Ferguson J: “Emotional Stabilization Program: From Red Lights to Recovery. Creative Interchange”, Huntington Beach, Calif. P. 42, 1981.
- Barnard, et al, p. 249.
- Kuornika et al, p. 764.
- Sothmann et al, pp. 798-799.
- Kuorinka et al, pp. 764-765.