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High altitude laboratories

Physics Today, 1950
Science has always been international, and where it has flourished it has been nurtured by the contributions of men from all nations. High altitude laboratories similarly are especially beneficial if they are organized on an international basis. High altitude laboratories can serve the scientific community in many ways.
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Altitude sickness.

BMJ clinical evidence, 2005
Up to half of people who ascend to heights above 2500 m may develop acute mountain sickness, pulmonary oedema, or cerebral oedema, with the risk being greater at higher altitudes, and with faster rates of ascent.We conducted a systematic review and aimed to answer the following clinical questions: What are the effects of interventions to prevent, and ...
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Sleep at High Altitude

High Altitude Medicine & Biology, 1985
New arrivals to altitude commonly experience poor-quality sleep. These complaints are associated with increased fragmentation of sleep by frequent brief arousals, which are in turn linked to periodic breathing. Changes in sleep architecture include a shift toward lighter sleep stages, with marked decrements in slow-wave sleep and with variable ...
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Exercise at Altitude

Annual Review of Physiology, 1983
J. R. Sutton   +3 more
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TETANUS AND ALTITUDE

The Lancet, 1987
Keith Ball, Jonathan Elford, John Seaman
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The Eye at Altitude

International Ophthalmology Clinics, 1999
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Exercise and Altitude

High Altitude Medicine & Biology, 2013
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Children at altitude

Travel Medicine and Infectious Disease, 2007
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Hemoconcentration at altitude.

Journal of Applied Physiology, 1969
J R Lynch   +4 more
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