Title
Selected contribution: Peripheral chemoreflex function in high-altitude natives and patients with chronic mountain sickness
Date Issued
01 March 2003
Access level
metadata only access
Resource Type
journal article
Author(s)
Gamboa A.
Palacios J.A.
Robbins P.A.
Publisher(s)
American Physiological Society
Abstract
Peripheral chemoreflex function was-studied in high-altitude (HA) natives at HA, in patients with chronic mountain sickness (CMS) at HA, and in sea-level (SL) natives at SL. Results were as follows. 1) Acute ventilatory responses to hypoxia (AHVR) in the HA and CMS groups were approximately one-third of those of the SL group. 2) In CMS patients, some indexes of AHVR were modestly, but significantly, lower than in healthy HA natives. 3) Prior oxygenation increased AHVR in all subject groups. 4) Neither low-dose dopamine nor somatostatin suppressed any component of ventilation that could not be suppressed by acute hyperoxia. 5) In all subject groups, the ventilatory response to hyperoxia was biphasic. Initially, ventilation fell but subsequently rose so that, by 20 min, ventilation was higher in hyperoxia than hypoxia for both HA and CMS subjects. 6) Peripheral chemoreflex stimulation of ventilation was modestly greater in HA and CMS subjects at an end-tidal PO2 = 52.5 Torr than in SL natives at an end-tidal PO2 = 100 Torr. 7) For the HA and CMS subjects combined, there was a strong correlation between end-tidal PCO2 and hematocrit, which persisted after controlling for AHVR.
Start page
1269
End page
1278
Volume
94
Issue
3
Language
English
OCDE Knowledge area
Otros temas de Biología
Subjects
Scopus EID
2-s2.0-0037370798
PubMed ID
Source
Journal of Applied Physiology
ISSN of the container
87507587
Sources of information:
Directorio de Producción Científica
Scopus