Sea-level assessment of dynamic cerebral autoregulation predicts susceptibility to acute mountain sickness at high altitude

scientific article published on 29 September 2011

Sea-level assessment of dynamic cerebral autoregulation predicts susceptibility to acute mountain sickness at high altitude is …
instance of (P31):
scholarly articleQ13442814

External links are
P356DOI10.1161/STROKEAHA.111.621714
P698PubMed publication ID21960569

P50authorJulien V. BrugniauxQ51739789
Richard G WiseQ87084887
P2093author name stringMichael Wild
Peter J Davies
Damian M Bailey
Kevin A Evans
Nicholas J Cochand
P433issue12
P407language of work or nameEnglishQ1860
P921main subjectsea levelQ125465
high altitudeQ59775044
P304page(s)3628-3630
P577publication date2011-09-29
P1433published inStroke JournalQ7624282
P1476titleSea-level assessment of dynamic cerebral autoregulation predicts susceptibility to acute mountain sickness at high altitude
P478volume42

Reverse relations

cites work (P2860)
Q57096666AltitudeOmics: cerebral autoregulation during ascent, acclimatization, and re-exposure to high altitude and its relation with acute mountain sickness
Q48422342Cerebral autoregulation index at high altitude assessed by thigh-cuff and transfer function analysis techniques
Q37559282Cerebral pressure-flow relationship in lowlanders and natives at high altitude
Q48615464Effect of progressive normobaric hypoxia on dynamic cerebral autoregulation
Q48260154Intravenous Infusion of Nitroglycerine Leads to Increased Permeability on Dynamic Contrast-Enhanced MR Imaging in Pig Brains
Q92403315The Role of Salivary miR-134-3p and miR-15b-5p as Potential Non-invasive Predictors for Not Developing Acute Mountain Sickness