Effect of Intermittent Normobaric Hypoxia Exposures on Acute Mountain Sickness During Acute Ascent to 3500 m in Indian Military Personnel
Author(s) -
Gopinath Bhaumik,
Deepak Dass,
Dishari Ghosh,
Harish Kumar,
Sanjiva Kumar,
Utkarsha Kumar,
YK Sharma,
M Padmanabh Reddy,
Bhuvnesh Kumar,
Shashi Bala Singh
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
defence life science journal
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.135
H-Index - 3
eISSN - 2456-379X
pISSN - 2456-0537
DOI - 10.14429/dlsj.3.12906
Subject(s) - acclimatization , effects of high altitude on humans , hypoxia (environmental) , acute exposure , medicine , altitude (triangle) , altitude sickness , biology , ecology , chemistry , oxygen , geometry , mathematics , organic chemistry , anatomy
In emergencies/war like situations, rapid deployment of army personnel into high altitude occurs without proper acclimatization. Rapid deployment of unacclimatized soldiers to high mountainous environments may cause debilitating effects on operational capabilities and development of acute mountain sickness (AMS). Altitude acclimatization is the best strategy for the prevention of AMS Use of pharmacological intervention for prevention of AMS is a common practice. The use of intermittent hypoxic exposure (IHE) is an alternative approach for altitude acclimatization and it reduces occurrence and severity of AMS is. But, the use of intermittent normobaric hypoxia exposure at sea level on occurrence of AMS after acute ascent to 3500m altitude in Indian army personnel has not been tested yet.
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