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The finding explains why Tibetans do not get mountain sickness but raises the question of how they compensate for the lack of oxygen if not by making extra red blood cells.
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While some in the scientific and climbing communities worry about the effects of severe altitude on children, there is no conclusive evidence that an adolescent is at greater risk of getting acute mountain sickness, a potentially fatal condition that mountaineers can face at high altitude.
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The problem my colleague had is that he was with a less reputable company where the guides didn't recognise or react quickly enough to quite clear symptoms of serious mountain sickness and get him down the mountain.' He added that it was important for people to know their limitations and if possible, to take longer doing the climb on the basis that 'the slower you take it the better it is'.
The consequence is that most people who climb Kilimanjaro get sick unnecessarily, putting up with Acute Mountain Sickness because of tight schedules.
When mountaineers ascend rapidly to very high altitudes, they sometimes suffer from a condition called acute mountain sickness.
Subjects did not take prophylactic medication (eg acetazolamide) to prevent Acute Mountain Sickness (AMS).
Consequently, the celebration of Paul Bert as the founder of high-altitude physiology might seem puzzling; this can perhaps be explained by pointing out that for the more present-centred histories Mosso is problematic because he got it 'wrong', claiming carbon dioxide, not oxygen, as the crucial gas in the causation of mountain sickness.
Some mountaineers are more prone to the occurrence of acute mountain sickness (AMS) than others.
Hypoxia, Hypobaria, and Exercise Duration Affect Acute Mountain Sickness.
Acute Mountain Sickness Symptoms Depend on Normobaric versus Hypobaric Hypoxia.
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