Swedish man survived in snowed-in car
for two monthsDoctors say 'igloo effect' kept 44-year-old driver in
northern Sweden alive despite temperatures of -30C
Lizzy Davies
A Swedish
man who spent two months snowed inside his car as temperatures outside
dropped to -30C is "awake and able to communicate", according to
the hospital treating him, where stunned doctors believe he was kept alive
by the "igloo effect" of his vehicle.
The man,
believed to be Peter Skyllberg, 44, who was found near the north-eastern
town of Umeå on Friday by passers-by, told police he had been in the
car since 19 December without food, surviving only by eating snow and
staying inside his warm clothes and sleeping bag.
Dr Ulf
Segerberg, the chief medical officer at Noorland's University Hospital,
said he had never seen a case like it. The man had probably been kept
alive, he said, by the natural warming properties of his snowed-in car
which would have acted as "the equivalent of an igloo".
"This
man obviously had good clothes; he's had a sleeping bag and he's been in a
car that's been snowed over," said Segerberg. "Igloos usually
have a temperature of a couple of degrees below 0C and if you have good
clothes you would survive in those temperatures and be able to preserve
your body temperature. Obviously he has managed to preserve his body
temperature or he wouldn't have made it because us humans can't really
stand being cooled down like reptiles, for instance, which can change the
body temperature."
Two months
was at the "upper limit" of what a person would be able to
survive without food, added Segerberg.
Skyllberg
was found emaciated and very weak by a pair of snowmobilers who thought
they had found a crashed car. They dug down through about a metre of snow
to see its driver lying on the back seat in his sleeping bag, according to
Ebbe Nyberg, a local police officer.
"They
were amazed at what they found: a man in his mid-40s huddled inside in a
sleeping bag, starving and barely able to move or speak," Nyberg,
working in Vaesterbotten county, was quoted as saying.
A rescuer
told the local newspaper Västerbottens-Kuriren: "It's just
incredible that he's alive considering that he had no food, but also since
it's been really cold for some time after Christmas."
Police said
temperatures around Umeå had fallen to -30C. One doctor, Stefan
Branth, said Skyllberg may have survived by going into hibernation mode.
"A bit like a bear that hibernates. Humans can do that. He probably
had a body temperature of around 31C which the body adjusted to. Due to
the low temperature, not much energy was used up."
But
Segerberg said he was "sceptical" of this suggestion. "We
can't lower body temperature very much. A little bit we can, but if we
lower body temperatures more than just a little bit, we lose consciousness
and go into a coma," he said, cautioning that it was not his area of
expertise.
Skyllberg is
being treated in an ordinary ward in the University Hospital, where
Segerberg said he was "feeling well". It was unclear how he had
come to be stranded in the deserted lane.
Segerberg
said that, even in a part of the world where sub-zero temperatures and
heavy snow are the norm, this case was unusual. "There have been
cases of people caught out in the mountains, and if they can dig
themselves down in the snow they are able to survive and be found. But
there must be something special in this case."
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