โFeb-21-2015 06:19 PM
โMar-15-2015 11:40 PM
โMar-15-2015 04:18 PM
โMar-14-2015 07:54 PM
โMar-14-2015 07:04 PM
down home wrote:
At Grand Canyon wife and I went down the Angle Trail and back up and I though I was going to die. It was like Asthma not from exertion.
โMar-14-2015 03:53 PM
โMar-08-2015 02:06 PM
Tiger4x4RV wrote:
Take altitude sickness seriously; the advanced stages of it can kill you. Even the early stages are a pain, as you have discovered. I have had troubles with it for years, usually cope with the "climb high, sleep low" method. For me, this can be hiking at 10K+ feet and going back down the hill to a camp at 7K feet in California's Eastern Sierra. The problem for me does seem to be getting worse as I age.
Reputable info can be found online at the U.S. Centers for Disease Control:
http://wwwnc.cdc.gov/travel/yellowbook/2014/chapter-2-the-pre-travel-consultation/altitude-illness
U.S. National Library of Medicine/National Institutes of Health:
http://www.nlm.nih.gov/medlineplus/ency/article/000133.htm
Good luck!
โFeb-23-2015 07:11 PM
โFeb-23-2015 03:18 PM
โFeb-23-2015 05:07 AM
โFeb-22-2015 10:26 PM
โFeb-22-2015 07:18 PM
Ramp Digger wrote:
Thanks for the info. Just wondering if there might be an alternative to Diamox that might work just as well.
Thanks Ramp
โFeb-22-2015 06:08 PM
DiploStrat wrote:
As a certified SOB (Survivor of Bolivia), as well as Peru and Ecuador, for many years, please let me add a few comments. The links posted by Tiger4x4RV are essential reading.
-- Diamox works well for many people. Not me, but for most folks it does make a difference. Dramamine can also be help in suppressing vomiting. This is only a treatment of the symptoms, but in general, it is easier to control vomiting if you don't start.
-- Analgesics help with headaches for the first three or four days. (You are going to get them; why suffer?)
-- The most dangerous sign is a persistent, non-productive or "dry" cough. After about six hours this is almost certainly a sign of pulmonary edema and you need to get on inhaled oxygen fast. This one can kill you quickly.
-- Hydrate! The old mountaineer's rule is that your urine should be "gin clear." (Good luck, but you get the idea.)
People with Sickle Cell anemia or Sickle Trait are at special risk and may not know it. This condition is generally only found in people of African descent, but it is also found in some people of Sicilian descent. (The good news is that people with Sickle Cell can't contract Malaria, but that is another post.)
Final, anecdotal, observation; younger, fitter males suffer more than older females. Can't find any medical data to back this up, but, I have noted it to be true. Be careful.
โFeb-22-2015 05:57 PM
โFeb-22-2015 01:35 PM
tatest wrote:
Anybody else? Statistically, about 25% of visitors to altitudes about 5000-7000 feet will show symptoms of the most common altitude sickness, Acute Mountain Sickness (AMS) within 2-12 hours of their first night sleeping at that altitude, more quickly the higher the altitude. So you are in good company.
For most people, if they do not move to a yet higher altitude, the problem will often sort itself out in 24 to 72 hours if the person stays hydrated (dehydration complicates the oxygen absorption problem) which includes the part about no alcohol, which dehydrates one quickly.
AMS has little to do with age or fitness, except that 50+ age group tends to be less susceptible than infants and children. AMS is a blood chemistry adjustment thing, separable from more general breathing and cardiovascular health problems. Those problems are made worse by the lower O2 partial pressures, but that's a separate issue from AMS.
Supplemental oxygen can help, whether the problem is AMS, or a general fitness problem. Yours sounds like AMS, because it occurs in your sleep. Otherwise what your doctor says, sleep at lower altitudes.