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Assault on the Summit
part 5 |
back to part 4
Altitude and the Lungs: Pulmonary Edema
More common is High Altitude Pulmonary Edema (HAPE), the
water-logging that can flood the lungs, the most frequent
cause of death from mountain sickness. Normally the fluid that
collects naturally in the tissues around the lungs is absorbed
quickly without symptoms, but even a minor cold can provoke
this fluid to increase, leading to HAPE, where one literally
drowns in their own fluids. Rest and breathing oxygen will
help, but if HAPE or HACE get worse, rapid descent is
necessary. "Pressurizing" the climber (for a few hours) in an
inflatable bag, a so-called Gamov Bag, may also help. If
needed, such bags are available at Base Camp and Advanced Base
Camp (ABC).
Climbing Without Oxygen
Ed is the only team member climbing without breathing bottled
oxygen. "When I first attempt a Himalayan peak," he explains,
"I try to climb without oxygen, even if it keeps me from
reaching the summit. My personal goal is to see how I can
perform, to experience the mountain for what it is without
reducing it to my level. Altitude isn't all of it. There's the
snow conditions, the weather, your attitude, your health, your
strength—all of these must come together on the summit
day. But I always tell people that when you are climbing, it's
a round trip. Getting to the summit is optional, getting down
is mandatory." Since Reinhold Messner's historic first summit
of Everest without oxygen in 1978, more than fifty climbers
have reached Everest's summit without oxygen.
Altitude Sickness in the Early Days on Everest
Apart from Dr. Kellas, who on the way to Everest in 1921 quite
possibly died of pulmonary edema aggravated by dysentery (that
was not diagnosable at the time), the first known Everest
altitude victims succumded in 1924. Shamsher, one of the
Nepalese Gurkha soldier assistants brought along by General
Bruce, died of frostbite and "brain hemorrhage" (HACE) and
Manbahadar, an Indian Gurkha cobbler whose feet were
frostbitten to the ankles and would surely have involved
amputation of his lower legs, also died when his condition
became complicated by "pneumonia."
In 1933, a porter began behaving rather irrationally with an
ice axe and suffered an excruciating headache. He improved
when he came down the mountain. Nowadays, medics are inclined
to think he was a HACE victim. But, generally speaking, there
were surprisingly few cases of HAPE or HACE during the
pioneering Everest expeditions of the 1920s and 1930s. The
most likely explanation for this is the long up-and-downhill
journey through Tibet from Darjeeling to Everest. After 5 or 6
weeks, the climbers arrived fit and fairly well acclimatized.
Continue
Photos: (1,3) courtesy Araceli Segarra; (2) Liesl
Clark.
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