The phenomenon known in the mountaineering community as "mountain madness," "high-altitude bliss," or, in Japanese tradition, "ikaru," is a complex psychophysiological syndrome that occurs at high altitudes (usually above 2500-3000 meters). This state is characterized by inappropriate euphoria, loss of critical judgment, a sense of omnipotence, and ignoring danger, which often leads to fatal decisions. Contrary to romanticized notions, this is not a spiritual uplift, but a pathological change in brain function under hypoxia, posing a serious threat to life.
The key cause is hypobaric hypoxia (reduction in partial pressure of oxygen). The brain, consuming 20% of the total oxygen, is extremely sensitive to its deficiency. A cascade of pathological reactions develops:
Disfunction of the prefrontal cortex (PFC): This area is responsible for executive functions: planning, risk assessment, decision-making, impulse control. Under hypoxia, its activity is suppressed first. A person loses the ability to adequately assess the situation, ignores basic safety rules, and acts impulsively. This resembles a state of alcohol or drug intoxication.
Compensatory activation of the limbic system and release of neurotransmitters: In response to stress and hypoxia, dopamine, endorphins, and serotonin are released. This may cause a subjective feeling of euphoria, bliss, a false sense of strength and lightness. At the same time, the hippocampus (responsible for memory and orientation) and the amygdala (processing fear) are disrupted, leading to disorientation, memory lapses, and the loss of the fear — a key protective mechanism in the mountains.
Disruption of cerebral blood flow and edema: Under hypoxia, cerebral blood flow increases to compensate, but in a maladaptive ascent, this may lead to increased intracranial pressure, the development of high-altitude cerebral edema (HACE). Its early symptoms may be changes in behavior, apathy, or euphoria, coordination disorders ("drunken" gait). Without immediate descent, this condition quickly progresses to coma and death.
Symptoms exist on a continuum and can develop gradually:
Mild form (often at altitudes of 3000-4000 m): Inappropriate cheerfulness, talkativeness, a sense of "I can do anything," disregard for fatigue, a subjective feeling of incredible lightness and speed.
Moderate form: Disorientation in time and space, auditory or visual hallucinations (for example, the climber seems to be walking alone or hears music), paranoid ideas (that the partner has something in mind), illogical, obsessive actions.
Severe form (a sign of developing HACE): Complete loss of contact with reality, hallucinations, psychomotor excitement or stupor, aggression, complete refusal of help and descent. At this stage, a person is no longer able to save themselves.
The phenomenon is not universal. Factors that predispose to its development include:
Rate of ascent: Rapid ascent without acclimatization is the main factor.
Individual susceptibility: Depends on genetic characteristics, brain vessel condition, previous experience of high-altitude ascents.
Physical exhaustion, dehydration, hypothermia.
Alone ascent: Lack of a partner who could notice changes in behavior.
The 1996 Everest Tragedy: Experts noted in the analysis of the disaster that took the lives of 8 people that some decisions of group leaders (such as continuing the ascent after the agreed "turnaround time") could have been the result of hypoxic impairment of critical thinking.
The Case of Maurice Herzog (Annapurna, 1950): In his book "Annapurna," the French climber described incredible states of euphoria and detachment during the descent with frostbitten hands, when he was essentially on the brink of death. This is a classic literary description of altered states of consciousness at the limit of human capabilities.
The "ikaru" phenomenon in Japan: Among Japanese climbers, this state is well known and described as a sudden surge of strength and euphoria, after which often follow unconsidered actions and collapses.
The incident with a British climber on K2: A well-known incident where a climber in a state of high-altitude psychosis began to distribute his equipment to imaginary people and refused to put on an oxygen mask, claiming that he was breathing "pure cosmic mountain air."
It is important to distinguish the early signs of "mountain madness" from simple fatigue or joy from the ascent.
Test for ataxia: The simplest way is to ask a person to walk a straight line, heel to toe. Coordination disorders are a ominous sign.
Prevention — proper acclimatization: Stepwise ascent with "night stays," the rule "ascended height — sleep lower."
Hydration and nutrition.
The "friend" system: Continuous mutual monitoring of the state in a pair or group. Any sudden changes in the behavior of a partner (inappropriate cheerfulness, silence, irritability) should be considered as potential symptoms.
Pharmacological prevention: Use of acetazolamide (Diamox) to accelerate acclimatization, dexamethasone — for emergency treatment of beginning brain edema (only for descent, not for continuing the ascent!).
From an evolutionary point of view, this phenomenon is maladaptive. However, some anthropologists and psychologists have put forward hypotheses that mild forms of euphoria may have played a role in the occupation of high mountains by ancient humans, reducing the subjective burden of the ascent. In culture, however, it is often romanticized, interpreted as the "call of the mountains," "union with nature," or "mystical experience." Such interpretation is dangerous, as it encourages ignoring the objective mortal risks.
"Mountain madness" is not a metaphor or a poetic image, but a specific neurological syndrome of hypoxic brain damage. Its euphoric phase is particularly deceptive, as it masks the deadly danger under the feeling of happiness and omnipotence.
Understanding its nature is the obligation of everyone who sets off to high altitudes. This knowledge, which saves lives, requires strict self-control, discipline of acclimatization, and absolute trust in the alarm signals from partners. The most dangerous enemy in the mountains is not cold and wind, but the altered own consciousness, losing contact with reality. Therefore, the true strength of a climber is not in blind submission to the euphoric urge "up at any cost," but in the ability to recognize the symptoms of impending catastrophe in oneself in time and make the only correct decision: retreat to live and climb again another time. Mountain experience is primarily the experience of extreme clarity of mind, not its loss.
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