Literature DB >> 32182148

Spleen Volume and Contraction During Apnea in Mt. Everest Climbers and Everest Base Camp Trekkers.

Erika Schagatay1,2, Pontus Holmström1, Eric Mulder1, Prakash Limbu3, Fanny Saga Schagatay1, Harald Engan4, Angelica Lodin-Sundström5.   

Abstract

The human spleen can contract and transiently boost the blood with stored erythrocytes. We measured spleen volume and contraction during apneas in two groups, each containing 12 Caucasian participants (each 3 women): one group planning to summit Mt. Everest (8848 m; "Climbers") and another trekking to Everest Base Camp (5300 m; "Trekkers"). Tests were done in Kathmandu (1370 m) 1-3 days after arrival, before the Climb/Trek. Age, height, weight, vital capacity, resting heart rate, and arterial oxygen saturation were similar between groups (not significant). After 15 minutes of sitting rest, all participants performed a 1-minute apnea and, after 2 minutes of rest, 1 maximal duration apnea was performed. Six of the climbers did a third apnea and hemoglobin concentration (Hb) was measured. Three axial spleen diameters were measured by ultrasonic imaging before and after the apneas for spleen volume calculation. Mean (standard deviation) baseline spleen volume was larger in Climbers [367 (181) mL] than in Trekkers [228 (70) mL; p = 0.022]. Spleen contraction occurred during apneas in both groups, with about twice the magnitude in Climbers. Three apneas in six of the Climbers resulted in a spleen volume reduction from 348 (145) to 202 (91) mL (p = 0.005) and an Hb elevation from 147.9 (13.1) to 153.3 (11.3) g/L (p = 0.024). Maximal apneic duration was longer in Climbers [88 (23) seconds vs. 67 (18) seconds in Trekkers; p = 0.023]. We concluded that a large spleen characterizes Climbers, suggesting that spleen function may be important for high-altitude climbing performance.

Entities:  

Keywords:  apneic diving; breath-hold; high altitude; hypoxia tolerance; performance; prediction

Mesh:

Year:  2020        PMID: 32182148     DOI: 10.1089/ham.2019.0028

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  High Alt Med Biol        ISSN: 1527-0297            Impact factor:   1.981


  2 in total

1.  No differences in splenic emptying during on-transient supine cycling between aerobically trained and untrained participants.

Authors:  Damir Zubac; Ante Obad; Daniela Šupe-Domić; Ana Bošnjak; Mirela Zec; Vladimir Ivančev; Zoran Valić
Journal:  Eur J Appl Physiol       Date:  2022-01-11       Impact factor: 3.346

2.  Exposure to hypoxia causes stress erythropoiesis and downregulates immune response genes in spleen of mice.

Authors:  Haijing Wang; Daoxin Liu; Pengfei Song; Feng Jiang; Xiangwen Chi; Tongzuo Zhang
Journal:  BMC Genomics       Date:  2021-06-05       Impact factor: 3.969

  2 in total

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