Title
Pregnancy at high altitude in the Andes leads to increased total vessel density in healthy newborns
Date Issued
01 September 2016
Access level
open access
Resource Type
journal article
Author(s)
Gassmann N.N.
Van Elteren H.A.
Goos T.G.
Martin D.S.
Peralta P.C.
MacHaca S.A.
Reiss I.K.M.
Gassmann M.
De Jonge R.C.J.
Hospital III Puno EsSalud
Publisher(s)
American Physiological Society
Abstract
The developing human fetus is able to cope with the physiological reduction in oxygen supply occurring in utero. However, it is not known if microvascularization of the fetus is augmented when pregnancy occurs at high altitude. Fifty-three healthy term newborns in Puno, Peru (3,840 m) were compared with sea-level controls. Pre-and postductal arterial oxygen saturation (SpO2) was determined. Cerebral and calf muscle regional tissue oxygenation was measured using near infrared spectroscopy (NIRS). Skin microcirculation was noninvasively measured using incident dark field imaging. Pre-and postductal SpO2 in Peruvian babies was 88.1 and 88.4%, respectively, which was 10.4 and 9.7% lower than in newborns at sea level (P=0.001). Cerebral and regional oxygen saturation was significantly lower in the Peruvian newborns (cerebral: 71.0 vs. 74.9%; regional: 68.5 vs. 76.0%, P=0.001). Transcutaneously measured total vessel density in the Peruvian newborns was 14% higher than that in the newborns born at sea level (29.7 vs. 26.0 mm/mm2; P=0.001). This study demonstrates that microvascular vessel density in neonates born to mothers living at high altitude is higher than that in neonates born at sea level.
Start page
709
End page
715
Volume
121
Issue
3
Language
English
OCDE Knowledge area
Ciencias médicas, Ciencias de la salud
Pediatría
Subjects
Scopus EID
2-s2.0-85007438967
Source
Journal of Applied Physiology
ISSN of the container
87507587
Sponsor(s)
N. N. Gassmann and M. Gassmann acknowledge the Swiss National Science Foundation, the Zurich Center for Integrative Human Physiology (ZIHP), and the Stiftung f?r wissenschaftliche Forschung an der Universit?t Z?rich for valuable financial support.
Sources of information:
Directorio de Producción Científica
Scopus