High altitude medicine
Physiology of Altitude Acclimatization
Ventilation
- Increased elevation -> decreased partial pressure of O2 -> decreased PaO2
- Hypoxic ventilatory response results in incr ventilation to maintain PaO2
- Vigor of this inborn response relates to successful acclimatization
- Initial hyperventilation is attenuated by respiratory alkalosis
- As renal excretion of bicarb compensates for resp alkalosis, pH returns toward normal
- At this point ventilation continues to increase
- Process of maximizing ventilation culminates 4-7d at a given altitude
- With continuing ascent the central chemoreceptors reset to ever lower values of PaCO2
- Completeness of acclimatization can be gauged by partial pressure of arterial CO2
- Acetazolamide, which results in bicarb diuresis, can facilitate this process
- As renal excretion of bicarb compensates for resp alkalosis, pH returns toward normal
Blood
- Erythropoietin level begins to rise within 2d of ascent to altitude
- Takes days to weeks to significantly increase red cell mass
- This adaptation is not important for the initial initial acclimatization process
Fluid Balance
- Peripheral venoconstriction on ascent to altitude causes increase in central blood vol
- This leads to decreased ADH -> diuresis
- This diuresis, along with bicarb diuresis, is considered a healthy response to altitude
- One of the hallmarks of AMS is antidiuresis
Cardiovascular System
- SV decreases initially while HR increases to maintain CO
- Cardiac muscle in healthy pts can withstand extreme hypoxemia w/o ischemic events
- Pulmonary circulation constricts w/ exposure to hypoxia
- Degree of pulm HTN varies and a hyperreactive resopnse is a/w HAPE
Altitude Stages
- Hypoxemia is maximal during sleep; the altitude in which you sleep is most important
- Intermediate Altitude (5000-8000ft)
- Decreased exercise performance without major impairment in SaO2
- High Altitude (8000-14,000ft)
- Decreased SaO2 with marked impairment during exercise and sleep
- Very High Altitude (14,000-18,000ft)
- Abrupt ascent can be dangerous; acclimatization is required to prevent illness
- Extreme Altitude (>18,000ft)
- Only experienced by mountain climbers; accompanied by severe hypoxemia and hypocapnia
- Sustained human habitation is impossible
- RV strain, intestinal malabsorption, impaired renal function, polycythemia
High Altitude Syndromes
- All caused by hypoxia, seen in rapid ascent in unacclimatized pts, respond to O2/descent
Acute Mountain Sickness (AMS)
Background
- Usually only occurs with altitude >7000-8000ft
- May occur at lower altitudes in pts who are particularly susceptible (COPD, CHF)
- Associated w/ rate of ascent, sleeping altitude, strength of hypoxic vent response
- NOT associated with physical fitness, age, sex
- Pts tend to have recurrence of sx whenever they return to the symptomatic altitude
Clinical Features
- Symptoms usually develop 1-6hr after arrival at elevation
- May be delayed for 1-2d (esp after a night's sleep)
- Average duration of symptoms at 10,000ft = 15hr
- At higher elevations symptoms may last weeks / more likely to progress to HACE
- Diagnosis requires headache + one or more of the following:
- Nausea/vomiting
- Fatigue/weakness
- Dizzy/light-headedness
- Difficulty sleeping
- Onset of ataxia and ALOC heralds onset of HACE
- Fluid retention with facial/peripheral edema is physical hallmark of AMS
DDX
- Hypothermia
- CO poisoning
- Pulmonary or CNS infection
- Dehydration
- Migraine
- Whereas supp O2 dissipates HA due to AMS in 10-15min, O2 has no effect on migraines
- Exhaustion
Treatment
- Mild AMS
- Terminate ascent
- Either descend to lower altitude (by 1000-3000ft) or acclimatize at same altitude
- Acetazolamide
- Mechanism: speeds acclimatization by promoting bicarb diuresis
- Indications:
- History of altitude illness
- Abrupt ascent to >9800ft
- AMS requiring treatment
- Bothersome periodic breathing during sleep
- 125-250mg PO BID until symptoms resolve
- Side-effects
- Allergic reaction (if pt allergic to sulfa), paresthesias, polyuria
- Symptomatic treatment as necessary w/ analgesics and antiemetics
- Sleep-agents
- Benzos are only safe if given in conjunction with acetazolamide
- Nonbenzos are safe (zolpidem, diphenhydramine)
- Terminate ascent
- Moderate AMS
- Immediate descent for worsening symptoms
- Low-flow 0.5-1 L/min O2 if available (esp nocturnal administration)
- Acetazolamide 250mg PO BID
- Dexamethasone 4mg PO q6hr
- Symptom-improvement only; unlike acetazolamide does not aid acclimatization
- Hyperbaric therapy
Prevention
- Graded ascent w/ adequate time for acclimatization is the best prevention
- Acetazolamide prophylaxis
- Indicated for pts w/ history of altitude illness or forced rapid ascent to altitude
- Start 24hr before ascent and continue for the first 2d at altitude
- Can be restarted if illness develops
- Reduces symptoms of AMS by 75% in pts ascending rapidly to altitudes >8200ft
- Dexamethasone
- Start day of ascent and continue for first 2d at altitude
- 4mg PO q12hr
- Prevents and treats cerebral edema
- Ginkgo biloba
- Controversial if effective; safe
High Altitude Pulmonary Edema (HAPE)
- definition: two symptoms: dyspnea at rest, cough, weakness, chest tightness or congestion.
- And
- two signs: central cyanosis, crackles or wheezes, tachypnea, tachycardia.
- most common medical cause of altitude related death.
- >2500m, young males, usually second night of altitude or after 3- 4 days ascent.
- recent URI predisposes
- highest risk in mountain dweller who descends to sea level and then reascends- possibly due to pulm art muscle remodeling.
- is noncardiogenic pulmonary edema with pulm hypertension and inflammation of capillaries and transepithelial water and sodium transport. Caused by combination of both pulm hypertension and increased cap permeability.
- Nitric oxide (NO) inhalation decreases pulm art pressures and can improve oxygenation. Dz possibly due to NO deficiency?
Prevention
- limit exercise for first 1- 2 days. Also limit ascent when over 2500m to 300- 350m/day.
- Nifedipine 20mg TID or 30- 6- mg extended release qd- prevents HAPE but not pulm edema of exercise of AMS or HACE.
Treatment
- descend, oxygen, nifedipine 10 mg po, CPAP mask, diuretics, GAMOW bag.
- Can reascend in 2- 3days in needed but at increased risk for reoccurence.
High Altitude Cerebral Edema (HACE)
- Acute Mountain Sickness plus altered mental status or ataxia. Of if mountain sickness not present, is ataxia with mental status changes.
- occurs >4000m
- due to increased brain water, not just volume. Get increased intracranial pressure.
- initially get vasogenic edema- fluid and protein crosses BBB, Get reversible changes in white matter, especially corpus callosum.. Later get cytotoxic edema by toxins and ischemia. Mostly of gray matter and has poorer px.
- Theories: angiogenesis model- hypoxemia causes macrophages to release cytokines and vascular endothelium growth factor. Basement membranes of capillaries are dissolved causing leaks and petechial hemorrhages. Inhibited by dexamethasone.
- Other theory is due to unexpandable cranial vault. As brain volume increases buffering ability of CSF overcome and brain swells in closed nonexpanding space.
- Prevent as with AMS
Treatment
- descend, oxygen, dex 4- 8mg IV, then 4mg q6hr. If GAMOW bag available- 4-8 hr recompression may allow pt to walk down mountain (big help).
Source
Tintinalli
