4.3 Article

Adrenal, thyroid and gonadal axes are affected at high altitude

期刊

ENDOCRINE CONNECTIONS
卷 7, 期 10, 页码 1081-1089

出版社

BIOSCIENTIFICA LTD
DOI: 10.1530/EC-18-0242

关键词

cortisol; prolactin; TSH; ff3; fT4; follicle-stimulation hormone; luteinizing hormone; testosterone; altitude; hypobaric hypoxia

资金

  1. Swiss Mountain Medicine Society
  2. Insel Foundation
  3. Swisslos-Funds Canton Aargau

向作者/读者索取更多资源

Humans cannot live at very high altitude for reasons, which are not completely understood. Since these reasons are not restricted to cardiorespiratory changes alone, changes in the endocrine system might also be involved. Therefore, hormonal changes during prolonged hypobaric hypoxia were comprehensively assessed to determine effects of altitude and hypoxia on stress, thyroid and gonadal hypothalamus-pituitary hormone axes. Twenty-one male and 19 female participants were examined repetitively during a high-altitude expedition. Cortisol, prolactin, thyroid-stimulating hormone (TSH), fT4 and fT3 and in males follicle-stimulating hormone (FSH), luteinizing hormone (LH) and total testosterone were analysed as well as parameters of hypoxemia, such as SaO(2) and paO(2) at 550m (baseline) (n=40), during ascent at 4844m (n=38), 6022 m (n = 31) and 7050 m (n = 13), at 4844 m (n = 29) after acclimatization and after the expedition (n = 38) . Correlation analysis of hormone concentrations with oxygen parameters and with altitude revealed statistical association in most cases only with altitude. Adrenal, thyroid and gonadal axes were affected by increasing altitude. Adrenal axis and prolactin were first supressed at 4844m and then activated with increasing altitude; thyroid and gonadal axes were directly activated or suppressed respectively with increasing altitude. Acclimatisation at 4844m led to normalization of adrenal and gonadal but not of thyroid axes. In conclusion, acclimatization partly leads to a normalization of the adrenal, thyroid and gonadal axes at around 5000 m. However, at higher altitude, endocrine dysregulation is pronounced and might contribute to the physical degradation found at high altitude.

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