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ARTICLE |

Return to Low-Altitude Sickness: An Entity That Doesn't Exist FREE

Phillip A. Hertzman, MD
JAMA. 1990;263(17):2302-2302. doi:10.1001/jama.1990.03440170023026
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To the Editor.—  In the Questions and Answers section of the November 24 issue, the respondent asks if physicians practicing at high altitude have seen cases of "return to low-altitude sickness."1 After 13 years of practice in Los Alamos (altitude, 2230 m [7300 ft]), I have not cared for any patients who complained of this illness. Because of the nature of the employment in Los Alamos, individuals here travel to low-altitude areas frequently. I wonder whether the patient described develops headaches and nausea when she travels to other low-altitude areas and particularly if it develops when she is not visiting her family in New Jersey.

REFERENCES

Fulmer DH, Grover RF.  Return to low-altitude sickness . JAMA. 1989;;262:2926.

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Fulmer DH, Grover RF.  Return to low-altitude sickness . JAMA. 1989;;262:2926.
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