High Altitude and Diving Flashcards
How does the body acutely adapt to high altitude?
Increased CO; quick HR increase, then SV from systemic vasodilation and decreased afterload. Returns within days.
Minute ventilation increase via carotid body response for weeks (hyperventilation).
How does the body chronically adapt to high altitude?
Increased hemoglobin content via erythropoietin release. Constitiutional “left shift” for saturation.
Chronic respiratory alkylosis.
Higher resting ventilation
More myoglobin for skeletal muscle, higher capillary density.
Describe Acute Mountain Sickness (AMS)
Headache, nausea, malaise, insomnia, anorexia.
Can prevent with dexomethasone or acetazolamine.
Describe High Altitude Cerebral Edema (HACE)
Early AMS leading to ataxia, confusion, combativeness, hallucinations, coma.
Treat with oxygen, descent, ventilation, dexamethasone.
Describe High Altitude Pulmonary Edema (HAPE)
After 2 days, cough with pink frothy sputum, SOB, fatigue. Includes exuberant PHTN.
Treat with descent, oxygen, vasodilators (nifedipine).
Describe Chronic Mountain Sickness
Low birth weight infants, more pre-eclampsia.
Polycythemia and PHTN (Monge’s Disease) leads to more stroke and HF.
How do you treat decompression sickness (Bend’s)?
Hyperbaric chamber
How do you prevent nitrogen narcosis?
Use helium when deep sea diving?
What disease predispose worse symptoms at altitude?
Pulmonary fibrosis, COPD, obesity
What condition makes diving more dangerous?
Asthma