HYPOXIC VENTILATORY RESPONSIVENESS IN TIBETAN COMPARED WITH HAN RESIDENTS OF 3,658-M

被引:114
作者
ZHUANG, J
DROMA, T
SUN, S
JANES, C
MCCULLOUGH, RE
MCCULLOUGH, RG
CYMERMAN, A
HUANG, SY
REEVES, JT
MOORE, LG
机构
[1] UNIV COLORADO,HLTH SCI CTR,CARDIOVASC PULM RES LAB,4200 E 9TH AVE,DENVER,CO 80262
[2] TIBET INST MED SCI,LHASA 850000,PEOPLES R CHINA
[3] SHANGHAI INST PHYSIOL,SHANGHAI,PEOPLES R CHINA
[4] UNIV COLORADO,DEPT ANTHROPOL,DENVER,CO 80217
[5] USA,ENVIRONM MED RES INST,NATICK,MA 01760
关键词
VENTILATION; CONTROL OF BREATHING; HYPERCAPNIA; HYPOXIA; HYPOXIC VENTILATORY DEPRESSION;
D O I
10.1152/jappl.1993.74.1.303
中图分类号
Q4 [生理学];
学科分类号
071003 ;
摘要
Lifelong high-altitude residents of North and South America acquire blunted hypoxic ventilatory responses and exhibit decreased ventilation compared with acclimatized newcomers. The ventilatory characteristics of Himalayan high-altitude residents are of interest in the light of their reportedly lower hemoglobin levels and legendary exercise performance. Until recently, Sherpas have been the only Himalayan population available for study. To determine whether Tibetans exhibited levels of ventilation and hypoxic ventilatory drives that were as great as acclimatized newcomers, we compared 27 lifelong Tibetan residents of Lhasa, Tibet, China (3,658 m) with 30 acclimatized Han (''Chinese'') newcomers matched for age, body size, and extent of exercise training. During room air breathing, minute ventilation was greater in the Tibetan than in the Han young men because of an increased respiratory frequency, but arterial O2 saturation and end-tidal PCO2 did not differ, indicating similar levels of effective alveolar ventilation. The Tibetan subjects had higher hypoxic ventilatory response shape parameter A values and hypercapnic ventilatory responsiveness than the Han subjects. Among the Han subjects, duration of high-altitude residence correlated with the degree of blunting of the hypoxic ventilatory drive. Paradoxically, hyperoxia (inspired O2 fraction 0.70) increased minute ventilation and decreased end-tidal PCO2 in the Tibetan but not in the Han men. We concluded that lifelong Tibetan residents of high altitude neither hypoventilated nor exhibited blunted hypoxic ventilatory responses compared with acclimatized Han newcomers, suggesting that the effects of lifelong high-altitude residence on ventilation and ventilatory response to hypoxia differ in Tibetan compared with other high-altitude populations.
引用
收藏
页码:303 / 311
页数:9
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