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Altitude Travel in Patients With Pulmonary Hypertension: Randomized Pilot-Trial Evaluating Nocturnal Oxygen Therapy

Introduction: Stable patients with pulmonary arterial or chronic thromboembolic pulmonary hypertension (PH) wish to undergo altitude sojourns or air travel but fear disease worsening. This pilot study investigates health effects of altitude sojourns and potential benefits of nocturnal oxygen therapy...

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Autores principales: Lichtblau, Mona, Saxer, Stéphanie, Latshang, Tsogyal D., Aeschbacher, Sayaka S., Huber, Fabienne, Scheiwiller, Philipp M., Herzig, Joël J., Schneider, Simon R., Hasler, Elisabeth D., Furian, Michael, Bloch, Konrad E., Ulrich, Silvia
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Frontiers Media S.A. 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7492536/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32984379
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fmed.2020.00502
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author Lichtblau, Mona
Saxer, Stéphanie
Latshang, Tsogyal D.
Aeschbacher, Sayaka S.
Huber, Fabienne
Scheiwiller, Philipp M.
Herzig, Joël J.
Schneider, Simon R.
Hasler, Elisabeth D.
Furian, Michael
Bloch, Konrad E.
Ulrich, Silvia
author_facet Lichtblau, Mona
Saxer, Stéphanie
Latshang, Tsogyal D.
Aeschbacher, Sayaka S.
Huber, Fabienne
Scheiwiller, Philipp M.
Herzig, Joël J.
Schneider, Simon R.
Hasler, Elisabeth D.
Furian, Michael
Bloch, Konrad E.
Ulrich, Silvia
author_sort Lichtblau, Mona
collection PubMed
description Introduction: Stable patients with pulmonary arterial or chronic thromboembolic pulmonary hypertension (PH) wish to undergo altitude sojourns or air travel but fear disease worsening. This pilot study investigates health effects of altitude sojourns and potential benefits of nocturnal oxygen therapy (NOT) in PH patients. Methods: Nine stable PH patients, age 65 (47; 71) years, 5 women, in NYHA class II, on optimized medication, were investigated at 490 m and during two sojourns of 2 days/nights at 2,048 m, once using NOT, once placebo (ambient air), 3 L/min per nasal cannula, according to a randomized crossover design with 2 weeks washout at <800 m. Assessments included safety, nocturnal pulse oximetry (SpO(2)), 6-min walk distance (6 MWD), and echocardiography. Results: At 2,048 m, two of nine patients required medical intervention, one for exercise-induced syncope, one for excessive nocturnal hypoxemia (SpO(2) < 75% for >30 min). Both recovered immediately with oxygen therapy. Two patients suffered from acute mountain sickness. In 6 patients with complete data, nocturnal mean SpO(2) and cyclic SpO(2) dips reflecting sleep apnea significantly differed from 490 to 2,048 m with placebo, and 2,048 m with NOT (medians, quartiles): SpO(2) 93 (91; 95)%, 89 (85; 90)%, 97 (95; 97)%; SpO(2) dips 10.4/h (3.1; 26.9), 34.0/h (5.3; 81.3), 0.3/h (0.1; 2.3). 6 MWD at 490, 2,048 m without and with NOT was 620 m (563; 720), 583 m (467; 696), and 561 m (501; 688). Echocardiographic indices of heart function and PH were unchanged at 2,048 m with/without NOT vs. 490 m. Conclusions: 7/9 PH patients stayed safely at 2,048 m but revealed hypoxemia, sleep apnea, and reduced 6 MWD. Hemodynamic changes were trivial. NOT improved oxygenation and sleep apnea. The current pilot trial is important for designing further studies on altitude tolerance of PH patients.
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spelling pubmed-74925362020-09-25 Altitude Travel in Patients With Pulmonary Hypertension: Randomized Pilot-Trial Evaluating Nocturnal Oxygen Therapy Lichtblau, Mona Saxer, Stéphanie Latshang, Tsogyal D. Aeschbacher, Sayaka S. Huber, Fabienne Scheiwiller, Philipp M. Herzig, Joël J. Schneider, Simon R. Hasler, Elisabeth D. Furian, Michael Bloch, Konrad E. Ulrich, Silvia Front Med (Lausanne) Medicine Introduction: Stable patients with pulmonary arterial or chronic thromboembolic pulmonary hypertension (PH) wish to undergo altitude sojourns or air travel but fear disease worsening. This pilot study investigates health effects of altitude sojourns and potential benefits of nocturnal oxygen therapy (NOT) in PH patients. Methods: Nine stable PH patients, age 65 (47; 71) years, 5 women, in NYHA class II, on optimized medication, were investigated at 490 m and during two sojourns of 2 days/nights at 2,048 m, once using NOT, once placebo (ambient air), 3 L/min per nasal cannula, according to a randomized crossover design with 2 weeks washout at <800 m. Assessments included safety, nocturnal pulse oximetry (SpO(2)), 6-min walk distance (6 MWD), and echocardiography. Results: At 2,048 m, two of nine patients required medical intervention, one for exercise-induced syncope, one for excessive nocturnal hypoxemia (SpO(2) < 75% for >30 min). Both recovered immediately with oxygen therapy. Two patients suffered from acute mountain sickness. In 6 patients with complete data, nocturnal mean SpO(2) and cyclic SpO(2) dips reflecting sleep apnea significantly differed from 490 to 2,048 m with placebo, and 2,048 m with NOT (medians, quartiles): SpO(2) 93 (91; 95)%, 89 (85; 90)%, 97 (95; 97)%; SpO(2) dips 10.4/h (3.1; 26.9), 34.0/h (5.3; 81.3), 0.3/h (0.1; 2.3). 6 MWD at 490, 2,048 m without and with NOT was 620 m (563; 720), 583 m (467; 696), and 561 m (501; 688). Echocardiographic indices of heart function and PH were unchanged at 2,048 m with/without NOT vs. 490 m. Conclusions: 7/9 PH patients stayed safely at 2,048 m but revealed hypoxemia, sleep apnea, and reduced 6 MWD. Hemodynamic changes were trivial. NOT improved oxygenation and sleep apnea. The current pilot trial is important for designing further studies on altitude tolerance of PH patients. Frontiers Media S.A. 2020-09-02 /pmc/articles/PMC7492536/ /pubmed/32984379 http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fmed.2020.00502 Text en Copyright © 2020 Lichtblau, Saxer, Latshang, Aeschbacher, Huber, Scheiwiller, Herzig, Schneider, Hasler, Furian, Bloch and Ulrich. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY). The use, distribution or reproduction in other forums is permitted, provided the original author(s) and the copyright owner(s) are credited and that the original publication in this journal is cited, in accordance with accepted academic practice. No use, distribution or reproduction is permitted which does not comply with these terms.
spellingShingle Medicine
Lichtblau, Mona
Saxer, Stéphanie
Latshang, Tsogyal D.
Aeschbacher, Sayaka S.
Huber, Fabienne
Scheiwiller, Philipp M.
Herzig, Joël J.
Schneider, Simon R.
Hasler, Elisabeth D.
Furian, Michael
Bloch, Konrad E.
Ulrich, Silvia
Altitude Travel in Patients With Pulmonary Hypertension: Randomized Pilot-Trial Evaluating Nocturnal Oxygen Therapy
title Altitude Travel in Patients With Pulmonary Hypertension: Randomized Pilot-Trial Evaluating Nocturnal Oxygen Therapy
title_full Altitude Travel in Patients With Pulmonary Hypertension: Randomized Pilot-Trial Evaluating Nocturnal Oxygen Therapy
title_fullStr Altitude Travel in Patients With Pulmonary Hypertension: Randomized Pilot-Trial Evaluating Nocturnal Oxygen Therapy
title_full_unstemmed Altitude Travel in Patients With Pulmonary Hypertension: Randomized Pilot-Trial Evaluating Nocturnal Oxygen Therapy
title_short Altitude Travel in Patients With Pulmonary Hypertension: Randomized Pilot-Trial Evaluating Nocturnal Oxygen Therapy
title_sort altitude travel in patients with pulmonary hypertension: randomized pilot-trial evaluating nocturnal oxygen therapy
topic Medicine
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7492536/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32984379
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fmed.2020.00502
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