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Cardiovascular adjustments for life at high altitude
Authors:Hainsworth Roger  Drinkhill Mark J
Affiliation:Institute for Cardiovascular Research, University of Leeds, Leeds LS2 9JT, UK. medrh@leeds.ac.uk
Abstract:
The effects of hypobaric hypoxia in visitors depend not only on the actual elevation but also on the rate of ascent. There are increases in sympathetic activity resulting in increases in systemic vascular resistance, blood pressure and heart rate. Pulmonary vasoconstriction leads to pulmonary hypertension, particularly during exercise. The sympathetic excitation results from hypoxia, partly through chemoreceptor reflexes and partly through altered baroreceptor function. Systemic vasoconstriction may also occur as a reflex response to the high pulmonary arterial pressures. Many communities live permanently at high altitude and most dwellers show excellent adaptation although there are differences between populations in the extent of the ventilatory drive and the erythropoiesis. Despite living all their lives at altitude, some dwellers, particularly Andeans, may develop a maladaptation syndrome known as chronic mountain sickness. The most prominent characteristic of this is excessive polycythaemia, the cause of which has been attributed to peripheral chemoreceptor dysfunction. The hyperviscous blood leads to pulmonary hypertension, symptoms of cerebral hypoperfusion, and eventually right heart failure and death.
Keywords:Altitude   Mountain sickness   Hypoxia   Polycythaemia   Chemoreceptors   Baroreceptors   Autonomic nervous system   Vascular resistance   Cardiac output
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