AI Article Synopsis

  • Acute mountain sickness (AMS) affects many people ascending to high altitudes, but it can be prevented through proper acclimatization and is diagnosed using the Lake Louise Score (LLS).
  • A systematic review was conducted to explore the potential connection between oxygen saturation levels and the likelihood of developing AMS during high altitude ascent.
  • Out of 980 studies reviewed, only seven met the criteria for inclusion, indicating that decreased oxygen saturation measured via pulse oximetry can help predict AMS development, but there's a need for more consistent research methods to improve reliability.

Article Abstract

Acute mountain sickness (AMS) causes serious illness for many individuals ascending to high altitude (HA), although preventable with appropriate acclimatisation. AMS is a clinical diagnosis, with symptom severity evaluated using the Lake Louise Score (LLS). Reliable methods of predicting which individuals will develop AMS have not been developed. This systematic review evaluates whether a predictive relationship exists between oxygen saturation and subsequent development of AMS. PubMed, PubMed Central, MEDLINE, Semantic Scholar, Cochrane Library, University of Birmingham Library and clinicaltrials.gov databases were systematically searched from inception to 15 June 2023. Human studies involving collection of peripheral blood oxygen saturation ( ) from healthy lowlanders during ascent to HA that evaluated any relationship between and AMS severity were considered for eligibility. Risk of bias was assessed using a modified Newcastle-Ottawa Tool for cohort studies (PROPSPERO CRD42023423542). Seven of 980 total identified studies were ultimately included for data extraction. These studies evaluated and AMS (via LLS) in 1406 individuals during ascent to HA (3952-6300 m). Risk of bias was 'low' for six and 'moderate' for one of the included studies. Ascent profiles and measurement methodology varied widely, as did the statistical methods for AMS prediction. Decreasing oxygen saturation measured with pulse oximetry during ascent shows a positive predictive relationship for individuals who develop AMS. Studies have high heterogeneity in ascent profile and oximetry measurement protocols. Further studies with homogeneous methodology are required to enable statistical analysis for more definitive evaluation of AMS predictability by pulse oximetry.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11607621PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1113/EP091875DOI Listing

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