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Limiting factors to oxygen transport on Mount Everest 30 years after: a critique of Paolo Cerretelli's contribution to the study of altitude physiology

Journal

EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF APPLIED PHYSIOLOGY
Volume 90, Issue 3-4, Pages 344-350

Publisher

SPRINGER-VERLAG
DOI: 10.1007/s00421-003-0923-2

Keywords

altitude adaptation; humans; muscle morphometry; maximum oxygen consumption limitation; lactate

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In 1976, Paolo Cerretelli published an article entitled Limiting factors to oxygen transport on Mount Everest in the Journal of Applied Physiology . The paper demonstrated the role of cardiovascular oxygen transport in limiting maximal oxygen consumption ((V)over dotO(2max)). In agreement with the predominant view of (V)over dotO(2max) limitation at that time, however, its results were taken to mean that cardiovascular oxygen transport does not limit (V)over dotO(2max) at altitude. So it was argued that the limiting factor could be in the periphery, and muscle blood flow was proposed as a possible candidate. Despite this suggestion, the conclusion generated a series of papers on muscle structural characteristics. These experiments demonstrated a loss of muscle oxidative capacity in chronic hypoxia, and thus provided an unambiguous refutation of the then widespread hypothesis that an increased muscle oxidative capacity is needed at altitude to compensate for the lack of oxygen. This analysis is followed by a short account of Cerretelli's more recent work, with a special attention to the subject of the so-called lactate paradox.

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