Literature DB >> 8872625

Breathing and brain blood flow during sleep in patients with chronic mountain sickness.

S Sun1, C Oliver-Pickett, Y Ping, A J Micco, T Droma, S Zamudio, J Zhuang, S Y Huang, R G McCullough, A Cymerman, L G Moore.   

Abstract

Chronic mountain sickness (CMS) patients have lower arterial O2 saturation (SaO2) during sleep compared with healthy high-altitude residents, but whether nocturnal arterial O2 content (CaO2) and brain O2 delivery are reduced is unknown. We measured SaO2, CaO2, sleep-disordered breathing (SDB), and internal carotid artery flow velocity in 8 CMS patients, 8 age-matched healthy CMS controls, 11 healthy younger-aged Han, and 11 healthy younger-aged Tibetan male residents of Lhasa, Tibet (3,658 m). CMS patients spent a greater portion of the night in SDB (total no. of episodes of apnea, hypopnea, and hypoventilation) than did the CMS controls, young Han, or young Tibetans (15% vs. 5, 1, and 1%, respectively; P < 0.05) because of more frequent apnea and hypoventilation episodes and longer duration of all types of episodes. SDB and unexplained arterial O2 desaturation caused nocturnal SaO2 to be lower and more variable in CMS patients than in CMS controls or in younger-aged Han or Tibetan men. Average CaO2 was similar, but the CMS patients spent 29%, whereas the other groups spent < 4%, of the night at values < 18 ml O2/100 ml whole blood. Internal carotid artery flow velocity during wakefulness was similar in CMS patients and CMS controls despite higher end-tidal PcO2 values in the CMS patients. When contiguous sleep stages are compared, flow velocity rose from stage 2 to rapid-eye-movement sleep in both groups. Whereas flow velocity remained elevated from awake to rapid-eye-movement sleep in the CMS controls, it fell in the CMS patients. During episodes of SDB, internal carotid flow velocity increased in CMS controls but did not change in the CMS patients such that values were lower in the CMS patients than in CMS controls at the end and after SDB episodes. We concluded that SDB and episodes of unexplained desaturation lowered nocturnal SaO2 and CaO2, which, together with a lack of compensatory increase in internal carotid artery flow velocity, likely decreased brain O2 delivery in CMS patients during a considerable portion of the night.

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Year:  1996        PMID: 8872625     DOI: 10.1152/jappl.1996.81.2.611

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Appl Physiol (1985)        ISSN: 0161-7567


  13 in total

1.  Neurological manifestations in chronic mountain sickness: the burning feet-burning hands syndrome.

Authors:  P K Thomas; R H King; S F Feng; J R Muddle; J M Workman; J Gamboa; R Tapia; M Vargas; O Appenzeller
Journal:  J Neurol Neurosurg Psychiatry       Date:  2000-10       Impact factor: 10.154

2.  Brain blood flow in Andean and Himalayan high-altitude populations: evidence of different traits for the same environmental constraint.

Authors:  Gerard F A Jansen; Buddha Basnyat
Journal:  J Cereb Blood Flow Metab       Date:  2010-08-25       Impact factor: 6.200

3.  Cerebrovascular responses to hypoxia and hypocapnia in high-altitude dwellers.

Authors:  L J Norcliffe; M Rivera-Ch; V E Claydon; J P Moore; F Leon-Velarde; O Appenzeller; R Hainsworth
Journal:  J Physiol       Date:  2005-04-28       Impact factor: 5.182

4.  Sleep-disordered breathing and oxidative stress in preclinical chronic mountain sickness (excessive erythrocytosis).

Authors:  Colleen Glyde Julian; Enrique Vargas; Marcelino Gonzales; R Daniela Dávila; Anne Ladenburger; Lindsay Reardon; Caroline Schoo; Robert W Powers; Teofilo Lee-Chiong; Lorna G Moore
Journal:  Respir Physiol Neurobiol       Date:  2013-02-04       Impact factor: 1.931

Review 5.  Measuring high-altitude adaptation.

Authors:  Lorna G Moore
Journal:  J Appl Physiol (1985)       Date:  2017-08-31

6.  Cardiometabolic correlates of sleep disordered breathing in Andean highlanders.

Authors:  Luu V Pham; Catherine H Miele; Noah G Schwartz; Rafael S Arias; Adi Rattner; Robert H Gilman; J Jaime Miranda; Vsevolod Y Polotsky; William Checkley; Alan R Schwartz
Journal:  Eur Respir J       Date:  2017-06-15       Impact factor: 16.671

7.  Ecological study of community-level factors associated with chronic mountain sickness in the young male chinese immigrant population in Tibet.

Authors:  Xiaoxiao Li; Tao Pei; Haotong Xu; Fasheng Tao; Haiyan You; Yan Liu; Yuqi Gao
Journal:  J Epidemiol       Date:  2012-02-18       Impact factor: 3.211

8.  Cross-Sectional Comparison of Sleep-Disordered Breathing in Native Peruvian Highlanders and Lowlanders.

Authors:  Luu V Pham; Christopher Meinzen; Rafael S Arias; Noah G Schwartz; Adi Rattner; Catherine H Miele; Philip L Smith; Hartmut Schneider; J Jaime Miranda; Robert H Gilman; Vsevolod Y Polotsky; William Checkley; Alan R Schwartz
Journal:  High Alt Med Biol       Date:  2017-03       Impact factor: 1.981

9.  Prevalence of Chronic Mountain Sickness in high altitude districts of Himachal Pradesh.

Authors:  Inderjeet Singh Sahota; Nidhi Singh Panwar
Journal:  Indian J Occup Environ Med       Date:  2013-09

Review 10.  Chronic Mountain Sickness: Clinical Aspects, Etiology, Management, and Treatment.

Authors:  Francisco C Villafuerte; Noemí Corante
Journal:  High Alt Med Biol       Date:  2016-05-24       Impact factor: 1.981

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