Ventilatory Chemosensitivity, Cerebral and Muscle Oxygenation, and Total Hemoglobin Mass Before and After a 72-Day Mt. Everest Expedition
Cheung, S. S., Mutanen, N. E., Karinen, H. M., Koponen, A. S., Kyröläinen, H., Tikkanen, H. O., & Peltonen, J. E. (2014). Ventilatory Chemosensitivity, Cerebral and Muscle Oxygenation, and Total Hemoglobin Mass Before and After a 72-Day Mt. Everest Expedition. High Altitude Medicine and Biology, 15(3), 331-340. https://doi.org/10.1089/ham.2013.1153
Published in
High Altitude Medicine and BiologyAuthors
Date
2014Copyright
© Mary Ann Liebert, Inc.
Abstract.
Cheung, Stephen S, Niina E. Mutanen, Heikki M. Karinen, Anne S. Koponen, Heikki Kyro
̈
la
̈
inen, Heikki O.
Tikkanen, and Juha E. Peltonen. Ventilatory chemosensitivity, cerebral and muscle oxygenation, and total
hemoglobin mass before and after a 72-day Mt. Everest expedition.
High Alt Med Biol
15:331–340, 2014.—
Background:
We investigated the effects of chronic hypobaric hypoxic acclimatization, performed over the
course of a 72-day self-supported Everest expedition, on ventilatory chemosensitivity, arterial saturation, and
tissue oxygenation adaptation along with total hemoglobin mass (tHb-mass) in nine experienced climbers (age
37
–
6 years,
_
VO
2peak
55
–
7mL
$
kg
-
1
$
min
-
1
).
Methods:
Exercise-hypoxia tolerance was tested using a constant treadmill exercise of 5.5 km
$
h
-
1
at 3.8%
grade (mimicking exertion at altitude) with 3-min steps of progressive normobaric poikilocapnic hypoxia.
Breath-by-breath ventilatory responses, Sp
o
2
, and cerebral (frontal cortex) and active muscle (vastus lateralis)
oxygenation were measured throughout. Acute hypoxic ventilatory response (AHVR) was determined by linear
regression slope of ventilation vs. Sp
o
2
. PRE and POST (
<
15 days) expedition, tHb-mass was measured using
carbon monoxide-rebreathing.
Results:
Post-expedition, exercise-hypoxia tolerance improved (11:32
–
3:57 to 16:30
–
2:09 min,
p
<
0.01).
AHVR was elevated (1.25
–
0.33 to 1.63
–
0.38 L
$
min
-
1.
%
-
1
Sp
o
2
,
p
<
0.05). Sp
o
2
decreased throughout
exercise-hypoxia in both trials, but was preserved at higher values at 4800 m post-expedition. Cerebral
oxygenation decreased progressively with increasing exercise-hypoxia in both trials, with a lower level of
deoxyhemoglobin POST at 2400, 3500 and 4800 m. Muscle oxygenation also decreased throughout exercise-
hypoxia, with similar patterns PRE and POST. No relationship was observed between the slope of AHVR and
cerebral or muscle oxygenation either PRE or POST. Absolute tHb-mass response exhibited great individual
variation with a nonsignificant 5.4% increasing trend post-expedition (975
–
154 g PRE and 1025
–
124 g
POST,
p
=
0.17).
Conclusions:
We conclude that adaptation to chronic hypoxia during a climbing expedition to Mt. Everest will
increase hypoxic tolerance, AHVR, and cerebral but not muscle oxygenation, as measured during simulated
acute hypoxia at sea level. However, tHb-mass did not increase significantly and improvement in cerebral
oxygenation was not associated with the change in AHVR
...
Publisher
Mary AnnLiebert, Inc. Publishers; International Society for Mountain MedicineISSN Search the Publication Forum
1527-0297Keywords
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- Liikuntatieteiden tiedekunta [3146]
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Except where otherwise noted, this item's license is described as © Mary Ann Liebert, Inc.
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