No lasting benefit from pressurization following rapid mountain ascent

Clinical Bottom Line:

1. Short-term relief of symptoms while compressed.

2. No longer term benefit from single compression

 

Citation:

Kayser B, Jean D, Herry JP. Pressurization and Acute Mountain Sickness, Aviation Space and Environmental Medicine, 1993;64 (10): 928-37

Three-part Clinical Question: In healthy young persons making a rapid mountain ascent, does treatment with air pressurization for three hours, compared with no treatment, reduce the symptoms of acute mountain sickness.

Search Terms: Acute Mountain Sickness, Hyperbaric

The Study:

Non-blinded randomised controlled trial with intention-to-treat.

Study Patients:  Young adult mountain climbers following a rapid ascent.

Control group: (N =  ;   analysed): Rest

Experimental group: (N =  ;   analysed): Pressurisation for three hours breathing air at 200mBar above ambient, starting 1 hour after arrival at altitude

 The Evidence:

 

Outcome Time to outcome Rest group

Pressurised group

P-value for difference

AMS score

1 hr (pre-press)

2.4 +/- 0.4

2.4 +/- 0.4

>0.05

AMS score

4 hrs (post-press)

2.4 +/- 0.4

0.9 +/- 0.3

<0.05

AMS score

13 hrs

6.2 +/- 0.7

5.7 +/- 0.6

>0.05

Comments:

1. AMS scores reflect mild disease only at all measures.

2. Some individuals had symptoms and others did not.

3. Actual numbers not reported.

Appraised by: Berend Stoutenbeek, Matthijs Somford; Thursday, July 03, 2003

Email: bm_stoutenbeek@hotmail.com

Kill or Update By:  November 2005