Acute mountain sickness: Is there a lag period before symptoms? (original) (raw)

Physiological and Psychological Illness Symptoms at High Altitude and Their Relationship With Acute Mountain Sickness: A Prospective Cohort Study

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2012

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Endurance Athletes Are at Increased Risk for Early Acute Mountain Sickness at 3450 m

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Peripheral Arterial Desaturation Is Further Exacerbated by Exercise in Adolescents With Acute Mountain Sickness

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Respiratory rate within the first hour of ascent predicts subsequent acute mountain sickness severity

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To Air Is Human: Altitude Illness During an Expedition Length Adventure Race☆☆☆

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EXERCISE EXACERBATES ACUTE MOUNTAIN SICKNESS AT SIMULATED HIGH ALTITUDE

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Acute mountain sickness: increased severity during simulated altitude compared with normobaric hypoxia

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Determinants of Acclimatisation in High Altitude

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Acute Mountain Sickness in Children and Their Parents After Rapid Ascent to 3500 m (Putre, Chile

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The relationship between acute mountain sickness and pulmonary ventilation at 2,835 meters (9,300 ft)

Thomas Hyers

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Sea-level physical activity and acute mountain sickness at moderate altitude

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Spectrum of Presentation of Acute Mountain Sickness at Different Altitudes

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Acute Mountain Sickness: Pathophysiology, Prevention, and Treatment

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High altitude maladies: recent trends in medical management

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Flying to high-altitude destinations: Is the risk of acute mountain sickness greater?

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The Physiologic Basis of High-Altitude Diseases

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Acute mountain sickness is related to nocturnal hypoxemia but not to hypoventilation

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High Altitude Pulmonary Edema, High Altitude Cerebral Edema, and Acute Mountain Sickness: an enhanced opinion from the High Andes – La Paz, Bolivia 3,500 m

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Physiologic affects of altitude on recreational climbers

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Andean High-Altitude Ancestry Does Not Protect from Acute Mountain Sickness and Altitude-Induced Arterial Hypoxemia

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Relationship between Changes in Cerebral Blood Flow with Symptoms of Acute Mountain Sickness in Men Repeatedly Exposed to Simulated High Altitude

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Prediction of Susceptibility to Acute Mountain Sickness by SaO2 Values during Short-Term Exposure to Hypoxia

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Acclimatization Near Home? Early Respiratory Changes After Short-Term Intermittent Exposure to Simulated Altitude

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Effects of Oxygen Supplementation on Acute Mountain Sickness Symptoms and Functional Capacity During a 2-Kilometer Walk Test on Chajnantor Plateau (5050 Meters, Northern Chile)

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Oximetry fails to predict acute mountain sickness or summit success during a rapid ascent to 5640 meters

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Altitude-Related Illnesses

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