| Literature DB >> 31257609 |
Max Gassmann1,2, Heimo Mairbäurl3, Leonid Livshits1, Svenja Seide4, Matthes Hackbusch4, Monika Malczyk5, Simone Kraut5, Norina N Gassmann1, Norbert Weissmann5, Martina U Muckenthaler6.
Abstract
Decreased oxygen availability at high altitude requires physiological adjustments allowing for adequate tissue oxygenation. One such mechanism is a slow increase in the hemoglobin concentration ([Hb]) resulting in elevated [Hb] in high-altitude residents. Diagnosis of anemia at different altitudes requires reference values for [Hb]. Our aim was to establish such values based on published data of residents living at different altitudes by applying meta-analysis and multiple regressions. Results show that [Hb] is increased in all high-altitude residents. However, the magnitude of increase varies among the regions analyzed and among ethnic groups within a region. The highest increase was found in residents of the Andes (1 g/dL/1000 m), but this increment was smaller in all other regions of the world (0.6 g/dL/1000 m). While sufficient data exist for adult males and females showing that sex differences in [Hb] persist with altitude, data for infants, children, and pregnant women are incomplete preventing such analyses. Because WHO reference values were originally based on [Hb] of South American people, we conclude that individual reference values have to be defined for ethnic groups to reliably diagnose anemia and erythrocytosis in high-altitude residents. Future studies need to test their applicability for children of different ages and pregnant women.Entities:
Keywords: anemia; ethnicity; excessive erythrocytosis; infants; newborns; pregnancy
Year: 2019 PMID: 31257609 DOI: 10.1111/nyas.14136
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Ann N Y Acad Sci ISSN: 0077-8923 Impact factor: 5.691