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Right temporal cerebral dysfunction heralds symptoms of acute mountain sickness
Authors:Berend Feddersen  Harald Ausserer  Pritam Neupane  Florian Thanbichler  Antoine Depaulis  Robb Waanders  Soheyl Noachtar
Affiliation:(1) Dept. of Neurology, Klinikum Grosshadern, University of Munich, Marchioninistr. 15, 81377 Munich, Germany;(2) Human Development and Community Services, Kathmandu, Nepal;(3) U704 Inserm-UJF Dynamique des Réseaux Neuronaux, University of Grenoble, France;(4) Dept. of Neuropsychology, Landeskrankenhaus Rankweil, Rankweil, Austria
Abstract:Acute mountain sickness (AMS) can occur during climbs to high altitudes and may seriously disturb the behavioral and intellectual capacities of susceptible subjects. During a Himalayan expedition 32 mountaineers were examined with electroencephalography (EEG) and transcranial doppler sonography (TCD) to assess relative changes of middle cerebral artery velocity in relation to end-expiratory CO2 (EtCO2), peripheral saturation (SaO2), and symptoms of AMS. We tested the hypothesis that O2 desaturation and EtCO2 changes precede the development of AMS and result in brain dysfunction and compensatory mechanisms which can be measured by EEG and TCD, respectively. Contrary to our hypothesis, we found that subjects who later developed symptoms of AMS between 3,440 m and 5,050 m altitude exhibited an increase of slow cerebral activity in the right temporal region already at 3,440 m. Cerebral blood flow increased in these mountaineers in the right middle cerebral artery at 5,050 m. These findings indicate that regional brain dysfunction, which can be documented by EEG, heralds the appearance of clinical symptoms of AMS. Each author will disclose any financial involvement or otherwise support that may potentially bias his/her work. Received in revised form: 5 April 2006
Keywords:acute mountain sickness  cerebral blood flow  electroencephalograpy  high altitude  transcranial doppler sonography
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