Acute Mountain Sickness Clinical Trial
Official title:
Sickness Evaluation at Altitude With Acetazolamide at Relative Dosages
This double blind randomized trial will compare acetazolamide taken the morning of ascent to acetazolamide taken the evening prior to ascent for the prevention of acute mountain sickness (AMS). The day of ascent dosing has not been studied as a powered primary outcome. The study population is hikers who are ascending at their own rate under their own power in a true hiking environment at the White Mountain Research Station, Owen Valley Lab (OVL) and Bancroft Station (BAR), Bancroft Peak, White Mountain, California
The specific aim of this study is to determine whether acetazolamide started the day-of
ascent is inferior to the standard night before ascent dose of acetazolamide for the
prevention of acute mountain sickness (AMS) in travelers in travelers to high altitude.
Acetazolamide has been examined in over 200 high altitude studies over the past 50 years, and
is the most commonly used drug for AMS prevention in the high mountains of Nepal, Western
Europe, and Africa. Current Wilderness Medical Society Practice Guidelines recommend a 125mg
dose of acetazolamide daily started the day or evening prior to ascent. However, day of
ascent dosage has recently been found to be effective prophylaxis for severe AMS compared to
placebo, but efficacy of day-of ascent dosage has not be confirmed versus standard
acetazolamide dosage.
While acetazolamide is commonly used as an acclimatization aid, it is traditionally started
the day or evening prior to ascent to theoretically optimize diuretic effect and compensatory
respiratory changes. This timing may be impractical when rapid ascent is necessary, such as
in search and rescue and military operations, or for the general recreationalists, trekkers,
or climbers who do not have time to start prophylaxis prior to heading into the mountains. As
there are an estimated 100 million recreationalists annually who ascend to high altitude
around the world, innovation on optimal timing has a potentially large impact on traveler
safety.
Acetazolamide has a time of onset between 60 - 90 minutes when taken as an immediate release
tablet, with peak effect between 2 - 4 hours. With these pharmacokinetics in mind, we
recently found that there was an observed robust protective effect of acetazolamide on severe
AMS when taken the morning of ascent, and this was the first study to examine day-of dosing.
This novel finding has not been otherwise investigated, and confirmation of this unique
observation has the potential to increase acetazolamide'sits usage in "high risk" populations
maximizing safety, while minimizing discomfort and poor sleep from pre-ascent nocturia., such
as trekkers, skiers, climbers, and tactical missions requiring rapid ascents in the mountains
of North America and Europe.
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