my mistakes happen on the keyboard, not in the O.R. plus i type so fast. like 500 words a minute. einstien couldnt spell either. its in the geneva convention buddy, look it up! shake and bake baby
just a few degrees deviation. at what altitude does this affliction start for ordinary people? i say ordinary because trained climbers can probably resist this better than non-climber (am i wrong here?)
lastly, i want to ask how the “dead zone” was delineated. is this altitude really where HAPE really kicks in and that 1 in 5 is sure to die?
Very, it’s got nothing to do with climbing ability and everything to do with acclimatization to altitude,
Stay long enough above ~8,000 m (26,000 ft) and 5 out of 5 are sure to die!
From here, here, and here (Cause I can’t get to my copy of Medicine for Mountaineering .Which IIRC isn’t anywhere near as complete as the Wiki pages :eek:.).
From here: http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmedhealth/PMH0000695/
Dextromethorphan is used to temporarily relieve cough caused by the common cold, the flu, or other conditions. Dextromethorphan will relieve a cough but will not treat the cause of the cough or speed recovery. Dextromethorphan is in a class of medications called antitussives. It works by decreasing activity in the part of the brain that causes coughing.
Dextromethorphan comes as a liquid-filled capsule, a chewable tablet, a dissolving strip, a solution (liquid), an extended-release (long-acting) suspension (liquid), and a lozenge to take by mouth.
Hot air cooling down or warm air cooling off is the same thing, and neither happens inside your lungs when you breathe cold air. A/Cs aren’t medicine either.
i dont know what that means, but someone called me a troll the other day. can you please define it for me so i may avoid it. does it have anything to do with not being able to spell good? also , what do you mean bait.? i want to stay in compliance, but dont understand the terminology. please help
you forgot the injectable version . like the one in vertical limit. but other than that, you have a pretty complete list. hats off to you for almost getting it right
yes coughing, like they were doing in the movie vertical limit. If you control the coughing by loosening the mucus with injectable DEX, you can delay the onset of the alltitude sickness , giving you more time to “GET TO THE CHOPPER” you are drifting off the subject hoss. stick to the question. try to focus on the movie, and put down the P.D.R.
yes , they are the same thing. and when you breath in cold air(i.e. the air in vertical limit around15 degrees f.) and it collids with the air in your lungs(98.6 F.) we get condensate, or fluid, or (Like in the movie, which you seem to have trouble sticking to) adema. trolling is not allowed, stick to the original question, which should be focusing on the movie. you are drifting off the subject here. p.s. the A/C comparison was for you, and you alone. i will avoid such technical comparisons in the future.
I can. and without all the uncalled for stuff. otherwise known as “the straight dope” the drug was dextramathorafan.(DEX for short) used to treat adema , or what climbers call "altitude sickness. everyone else seems to forget, it is a movie. and (in the movie) this is the way it is. it aint real life. and thats the straight dope yall
And the PubMed entry doesn’t list an injectable version of dextromethorphan because I don’t think an injection has been approved. I found some hints that people who use it recreationally might inject it and I found a clinical trial studying it as a treatment for pain after mastectomy, but you’re not going to get it from the pharmacy that way and I’m not sure why climbers would inject it.
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That’s a perfect example. In GQ, you answer the question, ask related questions, discuss other people’s answers. You don’t goad or taunt the other posters and imply that you’re only posting to get people riled up. You know perfectly well what you’re doing. Stop now.
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