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Emergency Medicine

High altitude

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Full-Text Articles in Medicine and Health Sciences

Findings Of Cognitive Impairment At High Altitude: Relationships To Acetazolamide Use And Acute Mountain Sickness., Lara Phillips, Buddha Basnyat, Yuchiao Chang, Erik R. Swenson, N. Stuart Harris Jun 2017

Findings Of Cognitive Impairment At High Altitude: Relationships To Acetazolamide Use And Acute Mountain Sickness., Lara Phillips, Buddha Basnyat, Yuchiao Chang, Erik R. Swenson, N. Stuart Harris

Department of Emergency Medicine Faculty Papers

Phillips, Lara, Buddha Basnyat, Yuchiao Chang, Erik R. Swenson, and N. Stuart Harris. Findings of cognitive impairment at high altitude: relationships to acetazolamide use and acute mountain sickness. High Alt Med Biol. 18:121-127, 2017.

OBJECTIVE: Acute mountain sickness (AMS) is defined by patient-reported symptoms using the Lake Louise Score (LLS), which provides limited insight into any possible underlying central nervous system (CNS) dysfunction. Some evidence suggests AMS might coexist with altered neural functioning. Cognitive impairment (CI) may go undetected unless a sensitive test is applied. Our hypothesis was that a standardized test for mild CI would provide an objective measure …