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ENVIRONMENTAL EMERGENCIES


SYMPTOMS/EXAM
■ AMS symptoms (common)
■ Cough (dry or productive)
■ Dyspnea at rest
■ Tachypnea and tachycardia
■ Rales
■ Fever

DIAGNOSIS
■ Primarily clinical, but can be confirmed with CXR showing bilateral patchy
infiltrates and normalheart size (see Figure 13.6)

TREATMENT
■ Bed rest
■ Mild to moderate cases may recover with bed rest ±O 2 at altitude.
■ Supplemental O 2
■ Descent(1500–3000 ft)
■ Hyperbaric O 2 therapy
■ If no descent or O 2 available: Nifedepine SL
■ Morphine and furosemide are controversial regarding benefit vs harm.

High-Altitude Cerebral Edema

HACE is the most severe form of high-altitude illness. As with HAPE, onset is
typically 2–4 days after arrival to altitude >12,000 ft.

FIGURE 13.6. CXR of patient with high-altitude pulmonary edema.

(Courtesy of Peter Hackett, MD as reproduced, with permission, from Knoop KJ, Stack LB,
Storrow AB.Atlas of Emergency Medicine, 2nd ed. New York: McGraw-Hill, 2002:515.)

HAPE is the most life
threatening of high-altitude
syndromes.

Dexamethasone can help
treat HACE or AMS but has no
effect for the treatment of
HAPE.
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