Acute Mountain Sickness
Acute Mountain Sickness
Acute Mountain Sickness
INTRODUCTION
• 150 MILLION PEOPLE RESIDE PERMANENTLY 2500 METERS OR ABOVE
AND ABOUT 50 MILLION PEOPLE ENTER THESE AREAS EVERY YEAR.
• TOURISTS, TREKKERS, MOUNTAINEERS, PILGRIMS, PORTERS, WORKERS,
SOLDIERS ETC.
• INDIVIDU TANPA AKLIMATISASI ACUTE MOUNTAIN SICKNESS (AMS) AT
HIGH ALTITUDE (HA) RANGING FROM BENIGN ACUTE MOUNTAIN SICKNESS
TO HIGH ALTITUDE PULMONARY OEDEMA (HAPO)/HIGH ALTITUDE
CEREBRAL OEDEMA (HACO).
INTRODUCTION
• 2500 METERS ALTITUDE IS TAKEN AS HIGH ALTITUDE BY MOST. ALTITUDES
OVER 5400 METERS ARE TAKEN AS EXTREMELY HIGH ALTITUDES AS AT THIS
LEVEL PERMANENT ACCLIMATIZATION IS NOT POSSIBLE.
• 2000 METERS TO 2700 METERS.
• DEVELOPING SYMPTOMS ALTITUDE REACHED, SPEED OF ASCENT,
PHYSICAL ACTIVITIES CARRIED OUT AFTER ATTAINING THAT ALTITUDE AND
OTHER VARIABLES LIKE AGE, SEX, OBESITY, PRIOR HISTORY, HYDRATION
STATUS ETC.
INTRODUCTION
• ARRIVAL IN HIGH ALTITUDE RESULTS IN CERTAIN PHYSIOLOGICAL
ADJUSTMENTS ENABLING THE PERSON TO SURVIVE IN THAT
ENVIRONMENT. IF A PERSON FAILS TO ACCLIMATISE OR LOSES THE GAINED
ACCLIMATIZATION HE CAN DEVELOP ACUTE HIGH ALTITUDE ILLNESSES.
• THE FACTORS CONTRIBUTING SIGNIFICANTLY IN THE PROCESS ARE THE
ENVIRONMENTAL FACTORS, GENETIC FACTORS AND CHANGES INDUCED IN
CARDIOVASCULAR, RESPIRATORY AND OXYGEN TRANSPORT/DELIVERY
SYSTEMS.
ENVIRONMENTAL FACTORS
• THE ENVIRONMENTAL FACTORS RESPONSIBLE ARE:
1. DECREASED PARTIAL ARTERIAL PRESSURE OF OXYGEN (PAO2 ).
2. COLD TEMPERATURE, HIGH WIND VELOCITIES AND RESULTANT DROP IN
HUMIDITY OF AIR
3. INCREASED IONIZING AND NON IONIZING RADIATIONS.
4. LOWERED BARIATRIC PRESSURE
RISK FACTORS
• HOME ELEVATION (ALTITUDE OF RESIDENCE) AND MAXIMUM SLEEPING ALTITUDE
(WHILE ASCENDING)
• RATE OF ASCENT DIRECTLY AFFECTS THE ONSET, SYMPTOM SEVERITY AND
PREVALENCE
• LATITUDE AFFECTS OXYGEN AVAILABILITY, HEMOGLOBIN SATURATION AND THE
RISK OF DEVELOPMENT.
• GENDER AND AGE ARE IMMATERIAL
• INTENSITY OF EXERCISE AT HIGH ALTITUDE
• ARTERIAL OXYHEMOGLOBIN SATURATION
• PRIOR ACUTE MOUNTAIN SICKNESS (AMS)
• GENETIC ADAPTATIONS
• PRE-EXISTING DISEASES
PHYSIOLOGY OF HIGH ALTITUDE ILLNESSES
• HA HYPOBARIC HYPOXIA VENTILATION INCREASES RESULTING IN
REDUCED OXYGEN GRADIENT FROM INSPIRED AIR TO ALVEOLI.
• PERIPHERAL CHEMORECEPTORS IN CAROTID AND AORTIC BODIES
INCREASED RESPIRATORY RATE AND TIDAL VOLUME RESPIRATORY
ALKALOSIS IS SLOWLY COMPENSATED BY RENAL EXCRETION OF
BICARBONATE.
• IF AN INDIVIDUAL IS UNABLE TO PROVIDE THIS CHEMORECEPTOR MEDIATED
VENTILATOR RESPONSE, ACCLIMATIZATION IS IMPAIRED LEADING TO HIGH
INCIDENCE OF HIGH ALTITUDE RELATED DISORDER.
• IN HEMOGLOBIN.
• AT HIGH ALTITUDE A SMALL DROP OF OXYGEN TENSION RESULTS IN
SIGNIFICANT DROP IN SAO2 .
• THE DIFFERENCE IN ARTERIAL O2 TENSION AND ALVEOLAR O2 TENSION A-
A DIFFERENCE.
• THIS A-A DIFFERENCE IS ALSO REDUCED IN HIGH ALTITUDE.
• HYPOXIA INDUCED PULMONARY VASOCONSTRICTIONSINCREASE IN
PULMONARY ARTERY PRESSURE MORE UNIFORM PERFUSION OF LUNGS
AND IS SEEN IN ALL ACCLIMATIZED LOWLANDERS
• HOWEVER DESPITE THIS HYPERVENTILATION AND REDUCTION IN A-A
GRADIENT ARTERIAL OXYGEN TENSION IS STILL LOWER THAN AT SEA LEVEL.
IT IS COMPENSATED BY INCREASE
• INITIALLY THIS RISE IN HEMOGLOBIN INCREASE HEMOCONCENTRATION
DIURESIS RESULTING IN DECREASE IN PLASMA VOLUME BY 15-20% (AFTER
FEW DAYS IT IS DUE TO INCREASE RELEASE OF ERYTHROPOIETIN)
• THE HYPERVENTILATION, REDUCTION OF A-A GRADIENT AND INCREASE IN
HAEMOGLOBIN AND HAEMATOCRIT BRINGING OXYGEN LEVEL IN BLOOD
TO NEAR NORMAL.
• HOWEVER TO DECREASE THE AFFINITY OF HEMOGLOBIN WITH OXYGEN THERE
IS INCREASE IN PARTIAL PRESSURE OF OXYGEN AT HA WHICH REDUCES THE
AFFINITY OF HEMOGLOBIN TO OXYGEN AND SHIFTS THE HEMOGLOBIN
OXYGEN DISSOCIATION CURVE TO RIGHT FAVOURS OFFLOADING OF
OXYGEN FROM HEMOGLOBIN.
• AT HA IN SPITE OF TACHYCARDIA THERE IS FALL IN CARDIAC OUTPUT DUE
TO DROP IN STROKE VOLUME BY ABOUT 20-25%.
• THIS DROP IN STROKE VOLUME IS DUE TO DECREASE IN VENOUS RETURN
AND HYPOXIA INDUCED MYOCARDIAL DEPRESSION. PLASMA VOLUME
ALSO NORMALLY DECREASES ON ASCENT DUE TO ALKALINE DIURESIS. (THIS
REDUCTION IN PLASMA VOLUME IS SUSTAINED ALONG WITH SUBSEQUENT
INCREASE IN TOTAL BLOOD VOLUME)
• THE HYPOXIC VENTILATOR RESPONSE (HVR) IS A BASIC RESPONSE TO HYPOXIA
VIA THE CHEMORECEPTORS AND IS FOUNDATION FOR SUCCESSFUL
ACCLIMATIZATION.
• A SUBNORMAL HVR WOULD LEAD TO ALVEOLAR HYPOVENTILATION, LOWER
ALVEOLAR O2 TENSION CAUSING PULMONARY VASOCONSTRICTION LEADING TO
CEREBRAL VASODILATATION DUE TO HIGH CO2 IN BLOOD.
• THE BASIC ABNORMALITY BETWEEN BENIGN AMS AND HACO IS CEREBRAL
OEDEMA, THE COMMON UNDERLYING UNIFYING FACTOR WITH HAPO IS
PROBABLY PULMONARY ARTERIAL HYPERTENSION.
• THE INCREASE IN PULMONARY BLOOD FLOW AND PULMONARY ARTERY PRESSURE
LEADS TO “STRESS FAILURE” OF THE PULMONARY CAPILLARIES LEADING TO
LEAKAGE OF FLUID IN TO INTERSTITIAL AND ALVEOLAR SPACES RESULTING IN
PULMONARY OEDEMA. EXERCISE FURTHER INCREASES THE PA PRESSURES AND
CAN THEREFORE PRECIPITATE HAPO.
• THE KEY DETERMINANT OF HA ILLNESS, RISK AND SEVERITY INCLUDE BOTH
INDIVIDUAL SUSCEPTIBILITY FACTORS AND ALTITUDINAL FACTORS (RAPID
RATE & HEIGHT) OF ASCENT AND TOTAL CHANGE IN ALTITUDE.
• INDIVIDUAL FACTORS CONTRIBUTING TO AMS INCLUDE UNDERLYING
DISEASE LIKE CARDIAC AND PULMONARY DISEASE, PRE EXISTING BLOOD
DISORDERS AND OTHER CHRONIC MEDICAL DISEASES. THOSE WITH
SYMPTOMATIC CARDIAC OR PULMONARY DISEASES ARE MORE LIKELY TO
DEVELOP AMS & SHOULD AVOID HIGH ALTITUDE.
PATHOPHYSIOLOGY
• MILD TO MODERATE AMS PRESENTS WITH RELATIVE HYPOVENTILATION,
FLUID RETENTION AND REDISTRIBUTION AND INCREASED SYMPATHETIC
DRIVE, WITHOUT A RISE IN INTRACRANIAL PRESSURE.
• EXACERBATION BY EXERCISE AFTER IMMEDIATE ALTITUDE EXPOSURE
WITHOUT ANY SIGNS OF PULMONARY GASEOUS EXCHANGE ABNORMALITIES
AND ONLY SMALL DIFFERENCE IN FLUID BALANCE, SUGGESTS A ROLE FOR
VASOGENIC CEREBRAL EDEMA, ELEVATED CEREBRAL BLOOD VOLUME (CBV)
BRAIN SWELLING, FLUID RETENTION/REDISTRIBUTION AND INTRACRANIAL
HYPERTENSION IN SEVERE AMS AND HACE.
• HYPOXEMIA ALTER ENDOTHELIAL PERMEABILITY OR PROVIDE CELLULAR
PROTECTION AGAINST OXYGEN DERIVED FREE RADICAL DAMAGE TO THE
ENDOTHELIUM
• HYPOXEMIA IS ALSO IMPLICATED IN UP-REGULATION OF INDUCIBLE NITRIC OXIDE
SYNTHASE AND NITRIC OXIDE HAS BEEN IMPLICATED HEADACHE AND BLOOD
BRAIN BARRIER (BBB) PERMEABILITY.
• HYPOXEMIA PERIPHERAL CHEMORECEPTOR ACTIVATION ELEVATE
CIRCULATING ARGININE VASOPRESSIN ANTIDIURESIS AND INCREASED
EXTRACELLULAR WATER LEVEL.
• ELEVATED INTRACRANIAL PRESSURES IN THOSE WITH A CEREBROSPINAL
CAPACITANCE THAT CANNOT BUFFER THE SWELLING BRAIN WHICH ULTIMATELY
DETERMINES WHO DEVELOPS AMS.
• THE TRIGEMINOVASCULAR SYSTEM IS ACTIVATED AT HIGH ALTITUDE BY BOTH
CHEMICAL AND MECHANICALHEADACHE SEEN IN AMS.
BENIGN ACUTE MOUNTAIN SICKNESS
• BENIGN ACUTE MOUNTAIN SICKNESS IS COMMONEST.
• THE EXACT INCIDENCE IS NOT KNOWN BUT IT USUALLY DEVELOPS WITHIN 6-96
HOURS OF STAY AT ALTITUDE.
• THE LAKE LOUISE CONSENSUS GROUP DEFINED ACUTE MOUNTAIN SICKNESS AS THE
PRESENCE OF HEADACHE IN AN UNACCLIMATIZED PERSON WHO HAS RECENTLY
ARRIVED AT AN ALTITUDE ABOVE 3000M PLUS AND THE PRESENCE OF ONE OR
MORE OF THE FOLLOWING:
a) GASTROINTESTINAL SYMPTOMS LIKE ANOREXIA, NAUSEA OR VOMITING,
b) INSOMNIA,
c) DIZZINESS AND
d) LASSITUDE OR FATIGUE
SYMPTOMS
• STARTS WITH HEADACHE WHICH IS FRONTAL IN LOCATION, THROBBING IN
CHARACTER AND IS BILATERAL. IT INCREASES IN MORNING ON WAKING UP, ON
EXERTION AND STRAINING.
• HEADACHE, WITHOUT DEHYDRATION AT 8,000 FT OR MORE IS THE PRIMARY
SYMPTOM (IT USUALLY RESPOND TO ANALGESICS)
• USUALLY COMBINED WITH ONE OR MORE OF THE FOLLOWING:
• LACK OF APPETITE, NAUSEA, VOMITING AND DIARRHEA
• FATIGUE OR WEAKNESS
• DIZZINESS OR LIGHTHEADEDNESS
• INSOMNIA
• PINS AND NEEDLE PRICKS
• THESE SYMPTOMS WILL HAVE A BENIGN AND SELF LIMITING COURSE AND WILL TEND
TO DISAPPEAR IN A WEEK.
• KARINEN ET AL NOTED THAT IT WAS POSSIBLE TO
PREDICT AND DIAGNOSE AMS AT AN EARLY STAGE
BY MEASURING OXYGEN SATURATION BY PULSE
OXYMETER AT REST AND AFTER MODERATE
EXERCISE. THEY CONCLUDED THAT LOWERING OF
SAO2 PREDICTS THE IMPENDING AMS.
• THE LAKE LOUIS CONSENSUS GROUP DERIVED
LAKE LOUIS SCORING SYSTEM IS GOLD STANDARD
FOR AMS (TABLE1) WHICH IS BASED ON CLINICAL
AND SUBJECTIVE SYMPTOMS. A SCORE 3 OR
MORE SIGNIFIES AMS AND A SCORE >5 INDICATE
SEVERE MOUNTAIN SICKNESS
• ASCENDING SLOWLY AND
AVOIDING STRENUOUS
ACTIVITY SUCH AS
SKIING, HIKING, ETC. IN
THE FIRST 24 HOURS
REDUCES THE SYMPTOMS.
ALCOHOL CAUSES
DEHYDRATION,
EXACERBATES AMS,
HENCE BE AVOIDED.
The Wilderness Altitude Illness Guidelines 2010 described the prophylactic measures for prevention
of AMS. Table 3 and Table 4 describes the acclimatization procedure for prevention of AMS.
TREATMENT
• BENIGN ACUTE MOUNTAIN SICKNESS
• IN MILD CASES REST, ANALGESICS AND CESSATION OF ASCENT ARE
SUFFICIENT AND PATIENT IS ASKED TO ACCLIMATIZE AT SAME ALTITUDE.
IBUPROFEN IS HELPFUL FOR HA HEADACHE, INTRAMUSCULAR
PROCHLORPERAZINE OR PROMETHAZINE ORALLY ARE HELPFUL FOR
VOMITING.
• HOWEVER IN SEVERE CASES OR IN THOSE WITH PROGRESSION OF SYMPTOMS,
DESCENT IS RECOMMENDED AND IF NOT POSSIBLE THEN HYPERBARIC BAG
SHOULD BE USED.
• ACTAZOLAMIDE 250 MG TWICE OR THRICE A DAY FOR 2-3 DAYS IS HELPFUL; IT
IS REPORTED TO BE OF USE IN INSOMNIA ALSO.
• SEDATION AND ALCOHOL SHOULD BE AVOIDED. LOW FLOW OXYGEN THERAPY
AT NIGHT IS USEFUL IN TREATMENT OF MILD AMS.
• Acute mountain sickness is usually self-limiting.
• Complete bed rest with plenty of fluids and oxygen enrichment can counteract its hypoxia related effects.
• At 11,155 ft raising the oxygen concentration level by 5% provides an effective altitude of 10,000 ft more
tolerable for surface dwellers.
• Acetazolamide may help in a rapid ascent to sleeping altitude above 9,000 ft, in a dosage of 125–250 mg
twice daily, starting from 24 hours before ascending until a few days at the highest altitude or on
descending.
• For those with allergy to sulfa or its toxic side effects, dexamethasone 4 mg stat followed by 4 mg/12 hourly
may suffice.
• For more serious cases, use of hyperbaric (decompression) chambers (Figure 2), produce excellent results,
which if not available, or where rapid descent is impractical, a Gamow bag (Figure 3), a plastic portable
hyperbaric chamber inflated with a foot pump is generally used both to treat at high altitude and as an aid
for descent.
• Sumatriptan (50 mg PO within 1 hour of ascent) has preventive effect. Antioxidants have not been found to
be effective. The use of phosphodiesterase-5 (PDE-5) inhibitors like sildenafil and tadalafil has been limited
by the possibility of their worsening the headache of AMS. Myo-inositol tripyrophosphate (ITPP) which
increases the amount of oxygen released by hemoglobin has proved useful. The locals have been using their
indigenous medications like: coca leaves
Laboratory Evaluation
• Individuals with the lower initial partial pressure of end-tidal pCO2
and corresponding high oxygen saturation level tend to have a lower
incidence of AMS than those with high end-tidal pCO2 and low
oxygen saturation levels. The Lake Louise assessment system of AMS
is based on a selfreport questionnaire as well as a quick clinical
assessment.
Altitude Acclimatization
• process of adjusting to decreasing oxygen levels at higher elevation,
• most climbers and high altitude trekkers take the “climb-high, sleep-low” approach.
• A typical acclimatization regimen might be to stay a few days at a base camp, climb to
the higher camp (slowly) and then return to base camp.
• A subsequent climb to the higher camp then includes an overnight stay.
• This process is repeated a few times, extending the time spent at higher altitude to let
the body adjust to the oxygen level there, resulting, in the production of additional red
blood cells.
• The general rule of the thumb is to not ascend more than 1,000 ft per day to sleep, i.e.
climb up to 13,000 ft from 10,000 ft and descend back to 11,000 ft to sleep.
• Simulated altitude equipment; the hyperbaric chambers being used to reduce the total
time required on the mountain itself has not proved to be as useful.
• Prophylactic use of acetazolamide (125 mg BD) has proven to be efficacious, while the
role of magnesium and leukotriene receptor blockers is still experimental.