4.3 Article

Sustained vasomotor control of skin microcirculation in Sherpas versus altitude-naive lowlanders: Experimental evidence from Xtreme Everest 2

Journal

EXPERIMENTAL PHYSIOLOGY
Volume 103, Issue 11, Pages 1494-1504

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1113/EP087236

Keywords

Flowmotion; hypobaric hypoxia; laser Doppler flowmetry; microcirculation

Categories

Funding

  1. Royal Free Hospital NHS Trust Charity
  2. University College London Hospital NHS Foundation Trust
  3. Southampton University Hospital Charity
  4. UCL Institute of Sports Exercise and Health
  5. London Clinic
  6. University College London
  7. University of Southampton
  8. Duke University Medical School
  9. United Kingdom Intensive Care Society
  10. National Institute of Academic Anaesthesia
  11. Rhinology and Laryngology Research Fund
  12. Physiological Society
  13. Smiths Medical
  14. Deltex Medical
  15. Atlantic Customer Solutions
  16. United Kingdom Department of Health's National Institute for Health Research Biomedical Research Centres funding scheme
  17. United Kingdom Department of Health's National Institute for Health Research Biomedical Research Units funding scheme

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Enhanced oxygen delivery, consequent to an increased microvascular perfusion, has been postulated to play a key role in the physiological adaptation of Tibetan highlanders to the hypobaric hypoxia encountered at high altitude. We tested the hypothesis that Sherpas, when exposed to graded hypobaric hypoxia, demonstrate enhanced vasomotor and neurovascular control to maintain microcirculatory flux, and thus tissue oxygenation, when compared with altitude-naive lowlanders. Eighty-three lowlanders [39 men and 44 women, 38.8 (13.1) years old; mean (SD)] and 61 Sherpas [28 men and 33 women, 27.9 (6.9) years old] were studied on ascent to Everest Base Camp over 11 days. Skin blood flux and tissue oxygen saturation were measured simultaneously using combined laser Doppler fluximetry and white light spectroscopy at baseline, 3500 and 5300 m. In both cohorts, ascent resulted in a decline in the sympathetically mediated microvascular constrictor response (P < 0.001), which was more marked in lowlanders than in Sherpas (P < 0.001). The microvascular dilator response evaluated by postocclusive reactive hyperaemia was significantly greater in Sherpas than in lowlanders at all sites (P < 0.002). Spectral analysis of the blood flux signals revealed enhanced myogenic (vasomotion) activity in Sherpas, which was unaffected by ascent to 5300 m. Although skin tissue oxygenation was lower in Sherpas than in lowlanders, the oxygen unloading rate was faster, and deoxyhaemoglobin levels higher, at all altitudes. Together, these data suggest that Sherpas, when exposed to hypobaric hypoxia, demonstrated superior preservation of peripheral microcirculatory perfusion compared with altitude-naive lowlanders. The physiological differences in local microvasculature vasomotor and neurovascular control may play a key role in Sherpa adaptation to high-altitude hypobaric hypoxia by sustaining local perfusion and tissue oxygenation.

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