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BackHeat Exhaustion vs. Heatstroke: Symptoms and What to Do
Heat Exhaustion vs. Heatstroke: Symptoms and What to Do
Urgent
BBC UK News5/25/2026Health3 min readUnited Kingdom

Heat Exhaustion vs. Heatstroke: Symptoms and What to Do

Quick Look

  • Heat exhaustion, marked by excessive sweating and a temperature of 38C+, requires cooling and rest.
  • Heatstroke is a medical emergency (40C+, confusion, seizure) needing immediate 999 call.

AI-generated summary

Why It Matters

During hot weather, overheating can lead to heat exhaustion or heatstroke. Heat exhaustion is usually not serious if you can cool down, but heatstroke is a medical emergency requiring immediate treatment. Certain groups like older adults, young children, and those with long-term health conditions are at higher risk.

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During hot weather, it can be easy to overheat, sometimes resulting in heat exhaustion or heatstroke.

Heat exhaustion is not usually serious as long as you can cool yourself down - but heatstroke is a medical emergency which requires immediate treatment.

Some groups, including older adults, young children and people with long-term health conditions can be particularly at risk.

What is the difference between heat exhaustion and heatstroke?

Heat exhaustion happens when your body becomes too hot and struggles to regulate its temperature.

An obvious sign is excessive sweating, as well as feeling very hot and unwell - which is your body's way of warning you to cool down, fast.

Other symptoms include:

headache

dizziness and confusion

loss of appetite and feeling sick

cramps in the arms, legs and stomach

fast breathing or pulse

temperature of 38C or above

being very thirsty

Young children, who might not be able to tell you about how they are feeling, may become floppy and sleepy.

Heat exhaustion can affect anyone, including fit and healthy people - especially if they have done strenuous exercise in high temperatures or have been drinking alcohol in the sun all day.

It can come on quickly, over minutes, or gradually, over hours.

Some medicines can also make it harder to regulate your temperature, or mean you are more likely to burn in the sun, feel dizzy, or become dehydrated.

Heat exhaustion can turn into heatstroke, which is a medical emergency. It means your body can no longer manage the heat and your core temperature is rising too high. You should get urgent medical help.

The signs to watch for and quickly act on:

feeling unwell after 30 minutes of resting in a cool place and drinking plenty of water

not sweating even while feeling too hot

a temperature of 40C or above

fast breathing or shortness of breath

feeling confused

a fit (seizure)

loss of consciousness

not responsive

What should you do if you think someone has heat exhaustion or heatstroke?

If someone has heat exhaustion:

get them to rest in a cool place - such as a room with air conditioning or somewhere in the shade

remove any unnecessary clothing, to expose as much of their skin as possible

cool their skin - use whatever you have available, a cool, wet sponge or flannel, spray water, cold packs around the neck and armpits, or wrap them in a cool, wet sheet

fan their skin while it is moist - this will help the water to evaporate, which will help their skin cool down

get them to drink water - sports or rehydration drinks are fine too

Stay with them until they are better.

They should start to cool down and feel better within 30 minutes.

If they do not improve after 30 minutes of rest, and you think they may have heatstroke, you should get urgent medical help. Call 999 immediately.

Open Questions

  • What specific long-term health conditions increase risk?
  • Are there specific medications that significantly increase risk?
  • What are the long-term consequences of heatstroke if not treated immediately?
  • What are the recommended rehydration fluids beyond water and sports drinks?

Related Topics

This article was originally published by BBC UK News.

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