4.2 Article

Neuropsychological and Neuroimaging Correlates of High-Altitude Hypoxia Trekking During the Gokyo Khumbu/Ama Dablam Expedition

Journal

HIGH ALTITUDE MEDICINE & BIOLOGY
Volume 23, Issue 1, Pages 57-68

Publisher

MARY ANN LIEBERT, INC
DOI: 10.1089/ham.2021.0029

Keywords

cognitive skills; high altitude; hypobaric hypoxia; mood state; neuroimaging

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The study investigated the effects of high-altitude hypoxia on neuropsychological and neuroimaging measures. The results showed that short-term exposure to high-altitude hypoxia up to 5,000 m did not have detrimental effects on these measures, especially in the absence of altitude sickness.
Committeri Giorgia, Danilo Bondi, Carlo Sestieri, Ginevra Di Matteo, Claudia Piervincenzi, Christian Doria, Roberto Ruffini, Antonello Baldassarre, Tiziana Pietrangelo, Rosamaria Sepe, Riccardo Navarra, Piero Chiacchiaretta, Antonio Ferretti, and Vittore Verratti. Neuropsychological and neuroimaging correlates of high-altitude hypoxia trekking during the Gokyo Khumbu/Ama Dablam expedition. High Alt Med Biol 00:000-000, 2021.Background: Altitude hypoxia exposure may produce cognitive detrimental adaptations and damage to the brain. We aimed at investigating the effects of trekking and hypoxia on neuropsychological and neuroimaging measures.Methods: We recruited two balanced groups of healthy adults, trekkers (n = 12, 6 F and 6 M, trekking in altitude hypoxia) and controls (gender- and age-matched), who were tested before (baseline), during (5,000 m, after 9 days of trekking), and after the expedition for state anxiety, depression, verbal fluency, verbal short-term memory, and working memory. Personality and trait anxiety were also assessed at a baseline level. Neuroimaging measures of cerebral perfusion (arterial spin labeling), white-matter microstructural integrity (diffusion tensor imaging), and resting-state functional connectivity (functional magnetic resonance imaging) were assessed before and after the expedition in the group of trekkers.Results: At baseline, the trekkers showed lower trait anxiety (p = 0.003) and conscientiousness (p = 0.03) than the control group. State anxiety was lower in the trekkers throughout the study (p < 0.001), and state anxiety and depression decreased at the end of the study in both groups (p = 0.043 and p = 0.007, respectively). Verbal fluency increased at the end of the study in both groups (p < 0.001), whereas verbal short-term memory and working memory performance did not change. No significant differences between before and after the expedition were found for neuroimaging measures.Conclusions: We argue that the observed differences in the neuropsychological measures mainly reflect aspecific familiarity and learning effects due to the repeated execution of the same questionnaires and task. The present results thus suggest that detrimental effects on neuropsychological and neuroimaging measures do not necessarily occur as a consequence of short-term exposure to altitude hypoxia up to 5,000 m, especially in the absence of altitude sickness.

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