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  2. Cold injury - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cold_injury

    Cold injury (or cold weather injury) is damage to the body from cold exposure, including hypothermia and several skin injuries. [6] Cold-related skin injuries are categorized into freezing and nonfreezing cold injuries. [5] Freezing cold injuries involve tissue damage when exposed to temperatures below freezing (less than 0 degrees Celsius).

  3. Frostbite - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Frostbite

    The pathological mechanism by which frostbite causes body tissue injury can be characterized by four stages: Prefreeze, freeze-thaw, vascular stasis, and the late ischemic stage. [16] Prefreeze phase: involves the cooling of tissues without ice crystal formation. [16] Freeze-thaw phase: ice-crystals form, resulting in cellular damage and death ...

  4. Heavy freezing spray warning - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Heavy_freezing_spray_warning

    A Heavy Freezing Spray Warning is issued by the National Weather Service of the United States to warn vessels that rapid accumulation and icing of freezing water droplets due to a combination of cold water, wind, cold air, and vessel or vehicle movement is likely.

  5. Aerosol burn - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aerosol_burn

    In freeze sprays, a controlled amount of this cooling is useful. Uncontrolled cooling, however, can result in freeze burns to the skin. According to controlled laboratory experiments, the gas from a typical deodorant spray can reduce skin temperature by up to sixty degrees Celsius. [2] The form of injury is freezing of the skin, a type of ...

  6. Ice pack - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ice_pack

    They can be used as a normal reusable ice pack by storing in a freezer, but they can also be heated in water or a microwave oven to reach the desired temperature. The first hot and cold pack was introduced in 1948 with the name Hot-R-Cold-Pak and could be chilled in a refrigerator or heated in hot water. [3]

  7. Individual quick freezing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Individual_Quick_Freezing

    Inside the freezer, the product travels through the freezing zone and exits the other side. Product transport inside the freezer uses different technologies. Some freezers use transport belts similar to a conveyor belt. Others use bed plates that hold the product, and an asymmetrical movement makes the plate advance by itself through the ...

  8. Everything you need to know about storing meat in your freezer

    www.aol.com/lifestyle/heres-long-meat-safely...

    Can meat go bad in the freezer? Freezing meat is a simple and effective way to stock up on your protein of choice, and meat doesn’t technically "go bad" while in the freezer. ... in cold water ...

  9. Non-freezing cold injury - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Non-freezing_cold_injury

    Non-freezing cold injuries (NFCI) is a class of tissue damage caused by sustained exposure to low temperature without actual freezing. [1] There are several forms of NFCI, and the common names may refer to the circumstances in which they commonly occur or were first described, such as trench foot, which was named after its association with trench warfare.