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Assault on the Summit
part 4 |
back to part 3
Altitude and the Brain: Cerebral Edema
The brain uses over 20% of the oxygen we breathe. Not
surprisingly, therefore, hypoxia affects the highest functions
first—such as judgment. This fact alone might be a
contributory factor in some, if not nearly all, of the
"accidental deaths" at altitude. Climbers on the highest
mountains, especially in the Himalayas, have made mistakes
they would never make on smaller peaks. In severe cases, the
brain becomes waterlogged and literally swells. Coordination
fails, and hallucinations become vivid. This is called High
Altitude Cerebral Edema, or HACE, and a climber can die from
it unless treatment is immediate.
Hallucinations nonetheless are a regularly experienced
phenomenon at high altitudes. Frank Smythe in 1933 saw strange
'flying objects' above the North Ridge which his friends
jocularly called "Frank's pulsating teapots". Reinhold
Messner, when he climbed the mountain without oxygen, felt he
was reduced to a single gasping lung: "I am nothing more than
a single narrow gasping lung, floating over the mists and the
summits." His companion Peter Habler also had an "out of body"
experience, floating above his own shoulder as he watched
himself climbing the upper slopes. The illusion of an extra
partner is common under the physical stresses of high altitude
climbing. Brummie Stokes and Bronco Lane, coming down from the
summit, each felt there was a third person on their rope, and
when they brewed tea or shared food they offered some to their
unseen companion. Chris Bonington in 1985 was helped to the
summit by the sense that his father-in-law was steering one
arm and his friend Dough Scott the other. Stephen Venables was
encouraged to find himself in a comfortable country pub with a
long-haired girl beside him.
Yves Malartic, author of Tenzing on Everest, wrote of
the severity of cerebral edema and what happens to a victim
before death: "Finally, the euphoria, hallucinations, and
over-excitement give way to lassitude. At first it becomes
impossible for a man to... think and to draw conclusions. His
ideas float away, vanish like clouds, and the man is unable to
fix his attention on anything. He struggles against the
fogginess of his mind, as he struggles against the wind from
Everest; he makes every effort to cling to the guide lines,
which, however, elude his grasp....The lassitude gets
worse...he continues to perceive, but he can no longer reason,
or if he does, then only to a slight degree. The impressions
that he receives no longer enter his mind. That is why those
who undertake such extraordinary exploits, such superhuman
efforts in the mountains, can for the most part give only
uncertain, vague, extremely terse reports of what they have
done. "
Continue
Photos: (1-3) courtesy Robert Schauer.
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