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Effect of acetazolamide on visuomotor performance at high altitude in healthy people 40 years of age or older—RCT

OBJECTIVE: Altitude travel is increasingly popular also for middle-aged and older tourists and professionals. Due to the sensitivity of the central nervous system to hypoxia, altitude exposure may impair visuomotor performance although this has not been extensively studied. Therefore, we investigate...

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Autores principales: Reiser, Aurelia E., Furian, Michael, Lichtblau, Mona, Buergin, Aline, Schneider, Simon R., Appenzeller, Paula, Mayer, Laura, Muralt, Lara, Mademilov, Maamed, Abdyraeva, Ainura, Aidaralieva, Shoira, Muratbekova, Aibermet, Akylbekov, Azamat, Sheraliev, Ulan, Shabykeeva, Saltanat, Sooronbaev, Talant M., Ulrich, Silvia, Bloch, Konrad E.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9858039/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36662903
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0280585
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author Reiser, Aurelia E.
Furian, Michael
Lichtblau, Mona
Buergin, Aline
Schneider, Simon R.
Appenzeller, Paula
Mayer, Laura
Muralt, Lara
Mademilov, Maamed
Abdyraeva, Ainura
Aidaralieva, Shoira
Muratbekova, Aibermet
Akylbekov, Azamat
Sheraliev, Ulan
Shabykeeva, Saltanat
Sooronbaev, Talant M.
Ulrich, Silvia
Bloch, Konrad E.
author_facet Reiser, Aurelia E.
Furian, Michael
Lichtblau, Mona
Buergin, Aline
Schneider, Simon R.
Appenzeller, Paula
Mayer, Laura
Muralt, Lara
Mademilov, Maamed
Abdyraeva, Ainura
Aidaralieva, Shoira
Muratbekova, Aibermet
Akylbekov, Azamat
Sheraliev, Ulan
Shabykeeva, Saltanat
Sooronbaev, Talant M.
Ulrich, Silvia
Bloch, Konrad E.
author_sort Reiser, Aurelia E.
collection PubMed
description OBJECTIVE: Altitude travel is increasingly popular also for middle-aged and older tourists and professionals. Due to the sensitivity of the central nervous system to hypoxia, altitude exposure may impair visuomotor performance although this has not been extensively studied. Therefore, we investigated whether a sojourn at moderately high altitude is associated with visuomotor performance impairments in healthy adults, 40y of age or older, and whether this adverse altitude-effect can be prevented by acetazolamide, a drug used to prevent acute mountain sickness. METHODS: In this randomized placebo-controlled parallel-design trial, 59 healthy lowlanders, aged 40-75y, were assigned to acetazolamide (375 mg/day, n = 34) or placebo (n = 25), administered one day before ascent and while staying at high altitude (3100m). Visuomotor performance was assessed at 760m and 3100m after arrival and in the next morning (post-sleep) by a computer-assisted test (Motor-Task-Manager). It quantified deviation of a participant-controlled cursor affected by rotation during target tracking. Primary outcome was the directional error during post-sleep recall of adaptation to rotation estimated by multilevel linear regression modeling. Additionally, adaptation, immediate recall, and correct test execution were evaluated. RESULTS: Compared to 760m, assessments at 3100m with placebo revealed a mean (95%CI) increase in directional error during adaptation and immediate recall by 1.9° (0.2 to 3.5, p = 0.024) and 1.1° (0.4 to 1.8, p = 0.002), respectively. Post-sleep recall remained unchanged (p = NS), however post-sleep correct test execution was 14% less likely (9 to 19, p<0.001). Acetazolamide improved directional error during post-sleep recall by 5.6° (2.6 to 8.6, p<0.001) and post-sleep probability of correct test execution by 36% (30 to 42, p<0.001) compared to placebo. CONCLUSION: In healthy individuals, 40y of age or older, altitude exposure impaired adaptation to and immediate recall and correct execution of a visuomotor task. Preventive acetazolamide treatment improved visuomotor performance after one night at altitude and increased the probability of correct test execution compared to placebo. CLINICALTRIALS.GOV IDENTIFIER: ClinicalTrials.gov NCT03536520.
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spelling pubmed-98580392023-01-21 Effect of acetazolamide on visuomotor performance at high altitude in healthy people 40 years of age or older—RCT Reiser, Aurelia E. Furian, Michael Lichtblau, Mona Buergin, Aline Schneider, Simon R. Appenzeller, Paula Mayer, Laura Muralt, Lara Mademilov, Maamed Abdyraeva, Ainura Aidaralieva, Shoira Muratbekova, Aibermet Akylbekov, Azamat Sheraliev, Ulan Shabykeeva, Saltanat Sooronbaev, Talant M. Ulrich, Silvia Bloch, Konrad E. PLoS One Research Article OBJECTIVE: Altitude travel is increasingly popular also for middle-aged and older tourists and professionals. Due to the sensitivity of the central nervous system to hypoxia, altitude exposure may impair visuomotor performance although this has not been extensively studied. Therefore, we investigated whether a sojourn at moderately high altitude is associated with visuomotor performance impairments in healthy adults, 40y of age or older, and whether this adverse altitude-effect can be prevented by acetazolamide, a drug used to prevent acute mountain sickness. METHODS: In this randomized placebo-controlled parallel-design trial, 59 healthy lowlanders, aged 40-75y, were assigned to acetazolamide (375 mg/day, n = 34) or placebo (n = 25), administered one day before ascent and while staying at high altitude (3100m). Visuomotor performance was assessed at 760m and 3100m after arrival and in the next morning (post-sleep) by a computer-assisted test (Motor-Task-Manager). It quantified deviation of a participant-controlled cursor affected by rotation during target tracking. Primary outcome was the directional error during post-sleep recall of adaptation to rotation estimated by multilevel linear regression modeling. Additionally, adaptation, immediate recall, and correct test execution were evaluated. RESULTS: Compared to 760m, assessments at 3100m with placebo revealed a mean (95%CI) increase in directional error during adaptation and immediate recall by 1.9° (0.2 to 3.5, p = 0.024) and 1.1° (0.4 to 1.8, p = 0.002), respectively. Post-sleep recall remained unchanged (p = NS), however post-sleep correct test execution was 14% less likely (9 to 19, p<0.001). Acetazolamide improved directional error during post-sleep recall by 5.6° (2.6 to 8.6, p<0.001) and post-sleep probability of correct test execution by 36% (30 to 42, p<0.001) compared to placebo. CONCLUSION: In healthy individuals, 40y of age or older, altitude exposure impaired adaptation to and immediate recall and correct execution of a visuomotor task. Preventive acetazolamide treatment improved visuomotor performance after one night at altitude and increased the probability of correct test execution compared to placebo. CLINICALTRIALS.GOV IDENTIFIER: ClinicalTrials.gov NCT03536520. Public Library of Science 2023-01-20 /pmc/articles/PMC9858039/ /pubmed/36662903 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0280585 Text en © 2023 Reiser et al https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Reiser, Aurelia E.
Furian, Michael
Lichtblau, Mona
Buergin, Aline
Schneider, Simon R.
Appenzeller, Paula
Mayer, Laura
Muralt, Lara
Mademilov, Maamed
Abdyraeva, Ainura
Aidaralieva, Shoira
Muratbekova, Aibermet
Akylbekov, Azamat
Sheraliev, Ulan
Shabykeeva, Saltanat
Sooronbaev, Talant M.
Ulrich, Silvia
Bloch, Konrad E.
Effect of acetazolamide on visuomotor performance at high altitude in healthy people 40 years of age or older—RCT
title Effect of acetazolamide on visuomotor performance at high altitude in healthy people 40 years of age or older—RCT
title_full Effect of acetazolamide on visuomotor performance at high altitude in healthy people 40 years of age or older—RCT
title_fullStr Effect of acetazolamide on visuomotor performance at high altitude in healthy people 40 years of age or older—RCT
title_full_unstemmed Effect of acetazolamide on visuomotor performance at high altitude in healthy people 40 years of age or older—RCT
title_short Effect of acetazolamide on visuomotor performance at high altitude in healthy people 40 years of age or older—RCT
title_sort effect of acetazolamide on visuomotor performance at high altitude in healthy people 40 years of age or older—rct
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9858039/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36662903
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0280585
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