HAPE vs HACE

HAPE and HACE are the two severe, life-threatening forms of altitude illness, both medical emergencies requiring immediate descent. HAPE (pulmonary edema) is fluid in the lungs, causing breathlessness and a cough; HACE (cerebral edema) is brain swelling, causing confusion and loss of coordination. They can occur together.

Aspect HAPE HACE
Affects The lungs The brain
Key symptoms Breathlessness, cough, fatigue Confusion, ataxia, altered consciousness
Hallmark sign Breathless at rest, frothy cough Can't walk heel-to-toe
Severity Life-threatening Life-threatening
Response Immediate descent + care Immediate descent + care

It's likely HAPE if…

  • Breathlessness out of proportion to effort
  • A cough, sometimes frothy or pink
  • Chest tightness, worse at night

It's likely HACE if…

  • Confusion or strange behavior
  • Stumbling, loss of coordination
  • Severe headache and drowsiness

Verdict

Both are deadly altitude emergencies demanding immediate descent — HAPE hits the lungs, HACE the brain, and they can strike together. Recognizing either early and descending fast saves lives. This is educational, not medical advice; seek emergency care.

Frequently asked questions

What's the difference between HAPE and HACE?

HAPE (high-altitude pulmonary edema) is fluid in the lungs, causing breathlessness, cough, and fatigue; HACE (high-altitude cerebral edema) is swelling of the brain, causing confusion, loss of coordination, and altered consciousness. Both are severe altitude illnesses and emergencies.

Can you have both HAPE and HACE?

Yes — they can occur together, and both often follow untreated acute mountain sickness. Having one raises concern for the other. Either, or both, means descending immediately and seeking emergency care.

What's the first response to HAPE or HACE?

Immediate descent to lower altitude is the single most important action for both. Supplemental oxygen, a portable hyperbaric (Gamow) bag, and certain medications can help and buy time, but they don't replace descent. Treat both as life-threatening emergencies.

Related: HAPE · HACE · Altitude sickness · Acclimatization