Heat Stroke & Dehydration Treatment in Wheaton, IL

Same-day pediatric care for children with heat exhaustion, dehydration, and heat-related illness, from newborn to age 22. Our Wheaton, IL team helps assess symptoms, restore fluids, and guide your next steps. Walk in or reserve your time today.

Young athlete experiencing heat illness on a sports field in Wheaton, IL

When Heat Illness Needs Medical Attention

Heat illness in kids can range from mild dehydration to a true medical emergency. The most common form is dehydration, but heat can also cause heat cramps, heat exhaustion, and heat stroke. Children dehydrate faster than adults and may not always tell you they feel sick.

At KIDS Urgent Care, we evaluate children with heat exhaustion, dehydration, and heat cramps, help restore fluids, and give you clear next steps. Bring your child in if symptoms are not improving after rest in a cool environment, if they cannot keep liquids down, or if you see signs of moderate dehydration.

Heat stroke is a life-threatening medical emergency, not an urgent care visit. Call 911 or go to the nearest emergency room if your child has a fever above 104°F, hot flushed skin (sometimes dry, sometimes sweaty), confusion or loss of consciousness, seizures, rapid breathing, or extreme weakness. While you wait for help, move them to a cool place and remove excess clothing.

Child with heat exhaustion being cooled during outdoor activity

Common Signs of Heat Illness & Dehydration

Heat illness symptoms can show up quickly, especially during outdoor activity, sports, or time spent in hot vehicles or warm rooms. Common signs include:

  • intense thirst or, in younger kids, refusing to drink
  • mild fever (100 to 102°F)
  • faintness, dizziness, or extreme tiredness
  • headache
  • nausea or vomiting
  • skin numbness or tingling
  • fewer wet diapers, or no urine for more than 8 hours in older kids
  • dark yellow urine, dry mouth, crying with few tears, or a sunken soft spot in infants
  • muscle cramps

If your child has been outside, exercising, or in a hot environment and develops any of these symptoms, move them to a cool place, offer small frequent sips of fluid, and watch closely. If symptoms do not improve within 30 minutes or get worse, they should be evaluated.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the difference between heat exhaustion and heat stroke?

Heat exhaustion is a less severe form of heat illness that often includes faintness, headache, mild fever (100 to 102°F), nausea, and intense thirst. It can usually be treated with rest, a cool environment, and fluids. Heat stroke is a life-threatening emergency with hot flushed skin, fever above 104°F, confusion, and possibly loss of consciousness. Heat stroke requires 911 or the emergency room, not urgent care.

Common signs include dark yellow urine, fewer wet diapers (fewer than 6 a day in babies, or no urine for more than 8 hours in older kids), dry mouth, crying with few tears, a sunken soft spot in infants, and unusual sleepiness or weakness. Babies and toddlers can dehydrate quickly, so do not wait if you see these signs.

Move your child to a cool place, remove extra clothing, offer small frequent sips of water or an oral rehydration solution, and use cool damp cloths on the skin. If symptoms do not improve within 30 minutes or get worse, your child needs medical attention.

Go to the emergency room or call 911 for any signs of heat stroke: fever above 104°F, hot flushed skin, confusion, loss of consciousness, seizures, rapid breathing, or extreme weakness. These are medical emergencies.

Walk-ins are welcome, and you can also reserve your time in advance for added convenience.

Get Care for Your Child Today

If your child is dealing with heat exhaustion, dehydration, or signs of heat illness, do not wait for symptoms to get worse. Visit KIDS Urgent Care in Wheaton, IL for prompt pediatric evaluation and care.