Why altitude is the bottleneck for mountain athletes
A trained mountaineer can run a 40-minute 10K at sea level and crawl a 40-minute kilometre at 4500m. The difference is not fitness, it is oxygen availability. Your aerobic system was built around a partial-pressure of oxygen that no longer exists where you are climbing. Until your body adapts, every step is harder than it should be (Bartsch & Saltin, 2008).
Acclimatisation is the set of physiological changes that happen when you spend time at altitude: increased ventilation, more red blood cells, better oxygen-carrying capacity, denser capillaries in working muscle. It does not make you a sea-level athlete again. It just narrows the gap.
The bottom line for mountain athletes: if your objective is above 3000m, acclimatisation is not optional. It is part of your training. And it has to be planned with the same rigour as your aerobic base.
What actually happens to your body at altitude
Three big systems shift, on three different timelines:
- Hours to days: ventilation rate increases (you breathe more), heart rate at rest goes up, plasma volume drops. This is the body trying to compensate for low oxygen on the fly.
- Days to weeks: erythropoietin (EPO) rises, stimulating red blood cell production. Your blood gets better at carrying oxygen. This is the headline adaptation, and it takes 10-21 days to mature meaningfully (Mazzeo, 2008).
- Weeks to months: capillary density in working muscles increases, mitochondrial efficiency improves, ventilatory threshold shifts. The deep adaptations - the ones that let you train hard at altitude - take real time.
The takeaway: a 3-day acclimatisation window before a 4000m peak gives you the breath-rate adaptation but not the red blood cell mass. A 14-day window gives you both. A 6-week expedition gives you the deep capillary adaptation. Plan your timeline accordingly.
Three ways to acclimatise
Most athletes only know about real altitude. There are three legitimate methods, each with different trade-offs:
1. Real altitude exposure
The gold standard. Spend nights at progressively higher elevations during your trip itself. Costs nothing extra if your objective is at altitude. Effective. The downside: you have to BE at altitude to do it, which means it cannot start until your trip starts.
2. Simulated altitude (hypoxic chambers, altitude tents)
Sleep in an altitude tent at home for several weeks before a trip. Stimulates EPO and some red blood cell adaptation without leaving sea level. Effective for the haematological side, less so for ventilatory adaptation, and useless for muscle-level changes (Hackett & Roach, 2001).
3. Intermittent Hypoxic Exposure (IHE)
Short hypoxic sessions during the day, often combined with training. Research is mixed - some studies show benefit for high-altitude performance, others find marginal effects. Treat as supplementary, not primary.
Real altitude is the gold standard. Simulated altitude is a useful supplement. Nothing replaces actual time on the mountain.
The "climb high, sleep low" rule
This is the single most important practical rule for acclimatisation. The body adapts to the altitude where you sleep, not where you visit. So you can climb to 4500m during the day, but if you sleep at 3500m, your body acclimatises to 3500m. The next day you climb to 4700m and sleep at 3800m. And so on.
The Wilderness Medical Society and UIAA both publish similar guidelines (paraphrased): above 3000m, do not increase sleeping altitude by more than 300-500m per night, and take a rest day every 1000m of altitude gained. Slower is safer. The mountain rewards patience.
Altitude sickness prevention tips that actually work
Most altitude sickness is preventable. The patterns below cover the majority of cases the Wilderness Medical Society and UIAA see in their consensus guidelines (Luks et al., 2019). Read them as prevention rules, not as treatment advice - if symptoms appear, descent is the only reliable answer.
- Respect the 300-500m sleeping-altitude rule above 3000m. The single most effective altitude sickness prevention measure is simply not gaining sleeping altitude too fast. Most AMS cases come from ignoring this.
- Spot early AMS symptoms and stop ascending. Persistent headache, poor sleep, loss of appetite, nausea, or unusual fatigue at altitude are the warning signs. Acute mountain sickness gets worse fast if pushed. Stop, rest, descend if it does not resolve.
- Hydrate aggressively. Cold dry air plus increased ventilation dehydrates you faster at altitude. Aim for 4-5 litres per day on heavy days; thin pale urine means adequate.
- Take real rest days. A rest day at altitude is a day at the same sleeping elevation, not a hard active day. Your body cannot acclimatise while it is also recovering from a 6-hour effort.
- Do not confuse sea-level fitness with altitude fitness. Sea-level VO2max says nothing about how you cope at 4000m. Both matter. Train both.
- Consider acetazolamide (Diamox) for high-risk profiles. Used prophylactically in standard 125-250mg twice-daily doses, acetazolamide reduces AMS incidence in studies (WMS guidelines). Talk to a doctor before any trip above 3500m, especially if you have a prior AMS history or a fast ascent profile.
- Avoid alcohol and sleeping pills the first 48h at altitude. Both depress ventilation, which is the body's primary altitude defence.
The takeaway
Acclimatisation is a physiological process, not a willpower contest. The athletes who summit reliably above 4000m plan their altitude exposure with the same care as their training - building it into the months before, respecting the climb-high-sleep-low rule, and listening when their body says slow down. If you want this kind of altitude planning built into your specific objective, that is what an adaptive mountaineering plan does. The science is the same; what changes is the timing of each block to match your peak and your timeline.