Chronic Mountain Sickness (Cms) Misdiagnosed As High Altitude Cerebral Edema (Hace) At Extreme Altitude (6400 M/21000 Ft)
author
Abstract:
Introduction: Chronic mountain sickness (CMS) represents a syndrome of secondary polycythemia along with thrombocytopenia, altered hemorheology, pulmonary and systemic hypertension, and congestive heart failure, occurring due to hypobaric hypoxia-anoxia-induced erythropoiesis reported in both native mountain residents and new climbers after prolonged stays at high and extreme altitudes.Case Presentation: A healthy non-smoker non-drinker reported occipital headache, breathlessness, and insomnia after an uneventful stay of 70 days at 6400 m/21000 ft. His hemoglobin was 21 gm/dL. The patient was diagnosed as having a case of CMS with a Qinghai CMS score >6. Therapeutic phlebotomy was performed; 350 mL was drained on two occasions, reducing his hemoglobin to 14.6 gm/dL.Conclusion: The altered presentation, difficult diagnosis, evacuation, and long-term management highlighted in this case occurring at 6400 m/21 000 ft in the Karakoram Himalayas represents the insidious nature of altitude sickness in acclimatized subjects.
similar resources
chronic mountain sickness (cms) misdiagnosed as high altitude cerebral edema (hace) at extreme altitude (6400 m/21000 ft)
introduction: chronic mountain sickness (cms) represents a syndrome of secondary polycythemia along with thrombocytopenia, altered hemorheology, pulmonary and systemic hypertension, and congestive heart failure, occurring due to hypobaric hypoxia-anoxia-induced erythropoiesis reported in both native mountain residents and new climbers after prolonged stays at high and extreme altitudes.case pre...
full textExtreme Altitude Chronic Mountain Sickness Misdiagnosed as High Altitude Cerebral Edema
Chronic mountain sickness (CMS) represents a variably reversible asynchronous syndrome of secondary polycythemia along with erythrocytosis, erythrocyte aggregation, hemoglobinemia, hemoconcentration, thrombocytopenia, increased whole blood viscosity, fibrinogenemia, prothrombotic state, pulmonary and systemic hypertension, and congestive heart failure, occurring due to hypobaric hypoxia-anoxia-...
full textCerebral Venous Sinus Thrombosis Masquerading as High Altitude Cerebral Edema at Extreme Altitude
Introduction: Extreme altitude travel has gained popularity globally for adventurous, scientific, and military endeavors. Cerebral venous sinus thrombosis (CVST) at extreme altitude is a rare, covert, and emergent condition requiring immediate intervention. Case Presentation: A case of CVST masqueraded as high altitude cerebral edema (HACE) at 6700 m/22000 ft i...
full textcerebral venous sinus thrombosis masquerading as high altitude cerebral edema at extreme altitude
introduction: extreme altitude travel has gained popularity globally for adventurous, scientific, and military endeavors. cerebral venous sinus thrombosis (cvst) at extreme altitude is a rare, covert, and emergent condition requiring immediate intervention. case presentation: a case of cvst masqueraded as high altitude cerebral edema (hace) at 6700 m/22000 ft in karakoram himalayas. atypical ol...
full textHigh Altitude Mountain Sickness
Its probable first account has been given by Plutarch in his comments on Alexander’s invasion of India: “Many then were the dangers— but the greatest harm came from severity of weathers”. Similarly, a Chinese record mentions of “Lesser Headache Mountains” and the “Greater Headache Mountains” where men’s bodies become feverish, they lose color and are attacked with headache, dizziness and vomiti...
full textHigh altitude cerebral edema.
This review focuses on the epidemiology, clinical description, pathophysiology, treatment, and prevention of high altitude cerebral edema (HACE). HACE is an uncommon and sometimes fatal complication of traveling too high, too fast to high altitudes. HACE is distinguished by disturbances of consciousness that may progress to deep coma, psychiatric changes of varying degree, confusion, and ataxia...
full textMy Resources
Journal title
volume 4 issue 4
pages 132- 134
publication date 2016-11-01
By following a journal you will be notified via email when a new issue of this journal is published.
Hosted on Doprax cloud platform doprax.com
copyright © 2015-2023