High-altitude headache

Expert Rev Neurother. 2007 Mar;7(3):245-8. doi: 10.1586/14737175.7.3.245.

Abstract

A human being's exposure to altitude, and the consequent hypobarism, entails a complex series of adaptive mechanisms that depend on the rate of ascent and the altitude reached. When these mechanisms fail, so-called acute mountain sickness (AMS) results, with headache as its predominant symptom. It has been observed, nonetheless, that well-acclimated mountaineers may have headache without symptoms of AMS. We consider that high altitude and ensuing hypobarism bring about three possibilities of cephalalgia: the first is covered by the set of AMS clinical manifestations and is undoubtedly the most frequent; the second occurs independently of acute mountain sickness and is probably due exclusively to hypoxia; and the third includes altitude-triggered migraine or migraine-like episodes. These are neurogenic problems secondary to hypoxia caused by hypobarism and, in all events, have a common denominator: hypoxia and a fundamental white organ, the brain.

Publication types

  • Review

MeSH terms

  • Altitude Sickness / classification
  • Altitude Sickness / complications
  • Altitude Sickness / diagnosis*
  • Altitude Sickness / physiopathology*
  • Brain / physiopathology*
  • Headache Disorders, Secondary / classification
  • Headache Disorders, Secondary / diagnosis*
  • Headache Disorders, Secondary / physiopathology*
  • Humans
  • Hypoxia, Brain / classification
  • Hypoxia, Brain / complications
  • Hypoxia, Brain / diagnosis*
  • Hypoxia, Brain / physiopathology*