Wilderness Environ Med. 2007 Winter;18(4):312-6.
New-onset anxiety disorders at high altitude.
Fagenholz PJ, Murray AF, Gutman JA, Findley JK, Harris NS.
Departments of Surgery, Massachusetts General Hospital, Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA 02140, USA.
OBJECTIVE: Studies on the neurologic effects of high-altitude travel have focused on psychometric and cognitive testing and the long-term effects of hypoxia on memory and cognition. Few authors have discussed overt clinical psychiatric illness during high-altitude travel, and those few have focused on patients with preexisting psychiatric diagnoses. We describe a series of patients with new-onset anxiety disorders at high altitude treated at the Himalayan Rescue Association (HRA) clinic in Pheriche, Nepal (4240 m) in the spring season of 2006. METHODS: We report on all 6 cases of anxiety-related illness diagnosed at the HRA Pheriche Clinic during the spring season, 2006. Three cases, representing the 3 discrete types of illness we encountered, are described in detail. RESULTS: Six of 76 foreign patients and none of the 224 Nepalis seen during the season had anxiety-related primary diagnoses. None of the 6 patients had a history of psychiatric disorders or anxiety-related problems at low altitude. Three of the 6 patients were seen after hours, and all 6 required multiple visits. We describe 3 types of anxiety-related disorders: limited-symptom panic attacks induced by nocturnal periodic breathing, excessive health-related anxiety, and excessive emotionality. CONCLUSIONS: Anxiety-related illness requires significant use of medical resources by high-altitude travelers. Further research is needed to define the epidemiology of anxiety-related disorders at high altitude, to quantify the contributions of various etiologic factors, and to identify safe, effective treatments.
Publication Types:
PMID: 18076297 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]
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