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Acute high altitude exposure, acclimatization and re-exposure on nocturnal breathing

Background: Effects of prolonged and repeated high-altitude exposure on oxygenation and control of breathing remain uncertain. We hypothesized that prolonged and repeated high-altitude exposure will improve altitude-induced deoxygenation and breathing instability. Methods: 21 healthy lowlanders, age...

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Autores principales: Furian, Michael, Bitos, Konstantinos, Hartmann, Sara E., Muralt, Lara, Lichtblau, Mona, Bader, Patrick R., Rawling, Jean M., Ulrich, Silvia, Poulin, Marc J., Bloch, Konrad E.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Frontiers Media S.A. 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9483161/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36134332
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fphys.2022.965021
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author Furian, Michael
Bitos, Konstantinos
Hartmann, Sara E.
Muralt, Lara
Lichtblau, Mona
Bader, Patrick R.
Rawling, Jean M.
Ulrich, Silvia
Poulin, Marc J.
Bloch, Konrad E.
author_facet Furian, Michael
Bitos, Konstantinos
Hartmann, Sara E.
Muralt, Lara
Lichtblau, Mona
Bader, Patrick R.
Rawling, Jean M.
Ulrich, Silvia
Poulin, Marc J.
Bloch, Konrad E.
author_sort Furian, Michael
collection PubMed
description Background: Effects of prolonged and repeated high-altitude exposure on oxygenation and control of breathing remain uncertain. We hypothesized that prolonged and repeated high-altitude exposure will improve altitude-induced deoxygenation and breathing instability. Methods: 21 healthy lowlanders, aged 18-30y, underwent two 7-day sojourns at a high-altitude station in Chile (4–8 hrs/day at 5,050 m, nights at 2,900 m), separated by a 1-week recovery period at 520 m. Respiratory sleep studies recording mean nocturnal pulse oximetry (SpO(2)), oxygen desaturation index (ODI, >3% dips in SpO(2)), breathing patterns and subjective sleep quality by visual analog scale (SQ-VAS, 0–100% with increasing quality), were evaluated at 520 m and during nights 1 and 6 at 2,900 m in the 1st and 2nd altitude sojourn. Results: At 520 m, mean ± SD nocturnal SpO(2) was 94 ± 1%, ODI 2.2 ± 1.2/h, SQ-VAS 59 ± 20%. Corresponding values at 2,900 m, 1st sojourn, night 1 were: SpO(2) 86 ± 2%, ODI 23.4 ± 22.8/h, SQ-VAS 39 ± 23%; 1st sojourn, night 6: SpO(2) 90 ± 1%, ODI 7.3 ± 4.4/h, SQ-VAS 55 ± 20% (p < 0.05, all differences within corresponding variables). Mean differences (Δ, 95%CI) in acute effects (2,900 m, night 1, vs 520 m) between 2nd vs 1st altitude sojourn were: ΔSpO(2) 0% (-1 to 1), ΔODI -9.2/h (-18.0 to -0.5), ΔSQ-VAS 10% (-6 to 27); differences in acclimatization (changes night 6 vs 1), between 2nd vs 1st sojourn at 2,900 m were: ΔSpO(2) -1% (-2 to 0), ΔODI 11.1/h (2.5 to 19.7), ΔSQ-VAS -15% (-31 to 1). Conclusion: Acute high-altitude exposure induced nocturnal hypoxemia, cyclic deoxygenations and impaired sleep quality. Acclimatization mitigated these effects. After recovery at 520 m, repeated exposure diminished high-altitude-induced deoxygenation and breathing instability, suggesting some retention of adaptation induced by the first altitude sojourn while subjective sleep quality remained similarly impaired.
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spelling pubmed-94831612022-09-20 Acute high altitude exposure, acclimatization and re-exposure on nocturnal breathing Furian, Michael Bitos, Konstantinos Hartmann, Sara E. Muralt, Lara Lichtblau, Mona Bader, Patrick R. Rawling, Jean M. Ulrich, Silvia Poulin, Marc J. Bloch, Konrad E. Front Physiol Physiology Background: Effects of prolonged and repeated high-altitude exposure on oxygenation and control of breathing remain uncertain. We hypothesized that prolonged and repeated high-altitude exposure will improve altitude-induced deoxygenation and breathing instability. Methods: 21 healthy lowlanders, aged 18-30y, underwent two 7-day sojourns at a high-altitude station in Chile (4–8 hrs/day at 5,050 m, nights at 2,900 m), separated by a 1-week recovery period at 520 m. Respiratory sleep studies recording mean nocturnal pulse oximetry (SpO(2)), oxygen desaturation index (ODI, >3% dips in SpO(2)), breathing patterns and subjective sleep quality by visual analog scale (SQ-VAS, 0–100% with increasing quality), were evaluated at 520 m and during nights 1 and 6 at 2,900 m in the 1st and 2nd altitude sojourn. Results: At 520 m, mean ± SD nocturnal SpO(2) was 94 ± 1%, ODI 2.2 ± 1.2/h, SQ-VAS 59 ± 20%. Corresponding values at 2,900 m, 1st sojourn, night 1 were: SpO(2) 86 ± 2%, ODI 23.4 ± 22.8/h, SQ-VAS 39 ± 23%; 1st sojourn, night 6: SpO(2) 90 ± 1%, ODI 7.3 ± 4.4/h, SQ-VAS 55 ± 20% (p < 0.05, all differences within corresponding variables). Mean differences (Δ, 95%CI) in acute effects (2,900 m, night 1, vs 520 m) between 2nd vs 1st altitude sojourn were: ΔSpO(2) 0% (-1 to 1), ΔODI -9.2/h (-18.0 to -0.5), ΔSQ-VAS 10% (-6 to 27); differences in acclimatization (changes night 6 vs 1), between 2nd vs 1st sojourn at 2,900 m were: ΔSpO(2) -1% (-2 to 0), ΔODI 11.1/h (2.5 to 19.7), ΔSQ-VAS -15% (-31 to 1). Conclusion: Acute high-altitude exposure induced nocturnal hypoxemia, cyclic deoxygenations and impaired sleep quality. Acclimatization mitigated these effects. After recovery at 520 m, repeated exposure diminished high-altitude-induced deoxygenation and breathing instability, suggesting some retention of adaptation induced by the first altitude sojourn while subjective sleep quality remained similarly impaired. Frontiers Media S.A. 2022-09-05 /pmc/articles/PMC9483161/ /pubmed/36134332 http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fphys.2022.965021 Text en Copyright © 2022 Furian, Bitos, Hartmann, Muralt, Lichtblau, Bader, Rawling, Ulrich, Poulin and Bloch. https://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 Physiology
Furian, Michael
Bitos, Konstantinos
Hartmann, Sara E.
Muralt, Lara
Lichtblau, Mona
Bader, Patrick R.
Rawling, Jean M.
Ulrich, Silvia
Poulin, Marc J.
Bloch, Konrad E.
Acute high altitude exposure, acclimatization and re-exposure on nocturnal breathing
title Acute high altitude exposure, acclimatization and re-exposure on nocturnal breathing
title_full Acute high altitude exposure, acclimatization and re-exposure on nocturnal breathing
title_fullStr Acute high altitude exposure, acclimatization and re-exposure on nocturnal breathing
title_full_unstemmed Acute high altitude exposure, acclimatization and re-exposure on nocturnal breathing
title_short Acute high altitude exposure, acclimatization and re-exposure on nocturnal breathing
title_sort acute high altitude exposure, acclimatization and re-exposure on nocturnal breathing
topic Physiology
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9483161/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36134332
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fphys.2022.965021
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