4.3 Article

Seasonal Effects of High-Altitude Forest Travel on Cardiovascular Function: An Overlooked Cardiovascular Risk of Forest Activity

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/ijerph18189472

Keywords

high altitude; hypoxia; cardiovascular function; acute mountain sickness

Funding

  1. Experimental Forest, National Taiwan University [EFNTU-105-C02]
  2. National Taiwan University Hospital [MG287]
  3. third core laboratory, National Taiwan University Hospital

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This study demonstrates the impact of hypoxemia and temperature changes on cardiovascular health as individuals ascend from low to high altitude. As altitude increases, participants experience significant increases in blood pressure, heart rate, and cardiac output, along with a significant decrease in blood oxygen saturation.
Cardiovascular physiological responses involving hypoxemia in low temperature environments at high altitude have yet to be adequately investigated. This study aims to demonstrate the health effects of hypoxemia and temperature changes in cardiovascular functions (CVFs) by comparing intra-individual differences as participants ascend from low (298 m, 21.9 degrees C) to high altitude (2729 m, 9.5 degrees C). CVFs were assessed by measuring the arterial pressure waveform according to cuff sphygmomanometer of an oscillometric blood pressure (BP) device. The mean ages of participants in winter and summer were 43.6 and 41.2 years, respectively. The intra-individual brachial systolic, diastolic BP, heart rate, and cardiac output of participants significantly increased, as participants climbed uphill from low to high altitude forest. Following the altitude increase from 298 m to 2729 m, with the atmosphere gradually reducing by 0.24 atm, the measured average SpO(2) of participants showed a significant reduction from 98.1% to 81.2%. Using mixed effects model, it is evident that in winter, the differences in altitude affects CVFs by significantly increases the systolic BP, heart rate, left ventricular dP/dt max and cardiac output. This study provides evidence that cardiovascular workload increased significantly among acute high-altitude travelers as they ascend from low to high altitude, particularly in winter.

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