Literature DB >> 24146388

Carbonic anhydrase inhibitors and high altitude illnesses.

Erik R Swenson1.   

Abstract

Carbonic anhydrase (CA) inhibitors, particularly acetazolamide, have been used at high altitude for decades to prevent or reduce acute mountain sickness (AMS), a syndrome of symptomatic intolerance to altitude characterized by headache, nausea, fatigue, anorexia and poor sleep. Principally CA inhibitors act to further augment ventilation over and above that stimulated by the hypoxia of high altitude by virtue of renal and endothelial cell CA inhibition which oppose the hypocapnic alkalosis resulting from the hypoxic ventilatory response (HVR), which acts to limit the full expression of the HVR. The result is even greater arterial oxygenation than that driven by hypoxia alone and greater altitude tolerance. The severity of several additional diseases of high attitude may also be reduced by acetazolamide, including high altitude cerebral edema (HACE), high altitude pulmonary edema (HAPE) and chronic mountain sickness (CMS), both by its CA-inhibiting action as described above, but also by more recently discovered non-CA inhibiting actions, that seem almost unique to this prototypical CA inhibitor and are of most relevance to HAPE. This chapter will relate the history of CA inhibitor use at high altitude, discuss what tissues and organs containing carbonic anhydrase play a role in adaptation and maladaptation to high altitude, explore the role of the enzyme and its inhibition at those sites for the prevention and/or treatment of the four major forms of illness at high altitude.

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Year:  2014        PMID: 24146388     DOI: 10.1007/978-94-007-7359-2_18

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Subcell Biochem        ISSN: 0306-0225


  17 in total

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Authors:  Michael J Marmura; Pablo Bandres Hernandez
Journal:  Curr Pain Headache Rep       Date:  2015-05

Review 2.  Headache and Barometric Pressure: a Narrative Review.

Authors:  Kushagra Maini; Nathaniel M Schuster
Journal:  Curr Pain Headache Rep       Date:  2019-11-09

3.  Hypoxia silences retrotrapezoid nucleus respiratory chemoreceptors via alkalosis.

Authors:  Tyler M Basting; Peter G R Burke; Roy Kanbar; Kenneth E Viar; Daniel S Stornetta; Ruth L Stornetta; Patrice G Guyenet
Journal:  J Neurosci       Date:  2015-01-14       Impact factor: 6.167

4.  Hypoxia, not pulmonary vascular pressure, induces blood flow through intrapulmonary arteriovenous anastomoses.

Authors:  Joshua C Tremblay; Andrew T Lovering; Philip N Ainslie; Mike Stembridge; Keith R Burgess; Akke Bakker; Joseph Donnelly; Samuel J E Lucas; Nia C S Lewis; Paolo B Dominelli; William R Henderson; Giulio S Dominelli; A William Sheel; Glen E Foster
Journal:  J Physiol       Date:  2014-12-23       Impact factor: 5.182

5.  The combined use of acetazolamide and Rhodiola in the prevention and treatment of altitude sickness.

Authors:  Chengzhu Cao; Huan Zhang; Yongchun Huang; Yameng Mao; Lan Ma; Shoude Zhang; Wei Zhang
Journal:  Ann Transl Med       Date:  2022-05

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Journal:  Nat Rev Cardiol       Date:  2022-01-06       Impact factor: 49.421

7.  Evidence from simultaneous intracellular- and surface-pH transients that carbonic anhydrase II enhances CO2 fluxes across Xenopus oocyte plasma membranes.

Authors:  Raif Musa-Aziz; Rossana Occhipinti; Walter F Boron
Journal:  Am J Physiol Cell Physiol       Date:  2014-06-25       Impact factor: 4.249

Review 8.  Carbon dioxide-dependent signal transduction in mammalian systems.

Authors:  D E Phelan; C Mota; C Lai; S J Kierans; E P Cummins
Journal:  Interface Focus       Date:  2021-02-12       Impact factor: 3.906

9.  Benzolamide improves oxygenation and reduces acute mountain sickness during a high-altitude trek and has fewer side effects than acetazolamide at sea level.

Authors:  David J Collier; Chris B Wolff; Anne-Marie Hedges; John Nathan; Rod J Flower; James S Milledge; Erik R Swenson
Journal:  Pharmacol Res Perspect       Date:  2016-05-19

10.  Mitochondrial proteomic profiling reveals increased carbonic anhydrase II in aging and neurodegeneration.

Authors:  Amelia Pollard; Freya Shephard; James Freed; Susan Liddell; Lisa Chakrabarti
Journal:  Aging (Albany NY)       Date:  2016-10-10       Impact factor: 5.682

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