Back to Results
First PageMeta Content
Skiing / High altitude cerebral edema / Altitude / High altitude pulmonary edema / Pulmonary edema / Edema / Fever / High altitude research / Health / Medicine / Altitude sickness


Clinical Biostatistics Exercise: Regression and correlation Read the following paper, "Association between raised body temperature and acute mountain sickness: cross sectional study" (British Medical Journal, 315, 403-4
Add to Reading List

Document Date: 2008-11-19 10:30:31


Open Document

File Size: 274,22 KB

Share Result on Facebook

City

Zurich / Heidelberg / Atlanta / Houston / Toronto / London / Boston / /

Company

Medline / /

Country

Switzerland / Germany / /

Facility

University Clinic of Medicine / Royal College of General Practitioners / University Hospital / Heathcote / /

IndustryTerm

Blood gas pressures / /

MedicalCondition

ataxia / Bartsch P. High altitude pulmonary edema / headache / systemic inflammatory disease / mountain sickness / such pulmonary oedema / pulmonary oedema / acute mountain sickness / vomiting / severe acute mountain sickness / high altitude pulmonary oedema / pulmonary edema / presumed high altitude pulmonary oedema / dizziness / infectious disease / mild acute mountain sickness / /

MedicalTreatment

surgery / /

NaturalFeature

Alps / /

Organization

Department of Medicine / Italian Alpine Club / University Hospital / Swiss National Science Foundation / /

Person

Drs Ian Brooman / Marco Maggiorini / Sandra Johnston / Angelo Mosso / Jacottet / Keren Hull / Drs Colin Smith / David Roche / David Armstrong / /

Position

physiologist / climber / General / /

ProvinceOrState

Georgia / /

PublishedMedium

British Medical Journal / /

Region

South East Thames / /

SocialTag