4.7 Article

Cardiac response to hypobaric hypoxia: persistent changes in cardiac mass, function, and energy metabolism after a trek to Mt. Everest Base Camp

期刊

FASEB JOURNAL
卷 25, 期 2, 页码 792-796

出版社

FEDERATION AMER SOC EXP BIOL
DOI: 10.1096/fj.10-172999

关键词

cardiac function; cardiac energy metabolism

资金

  1. British Heart Foundation
  2. Medical Research Council [Medical Research Council, grant G0601490]
  3. Rolex Foundation
  4. Association of Anesthetists of Great Britain
  5. Association of Anesthetists of Ireland
  6. UK Intensive Care Foundation
  7. Sir Halley Stuart Trust
  8. British Heart Foundation [RG/07/004/22659, FS/10/002/28078, PS/02/002/14893] Funding Source: researchfish
  9. Medical Research Council [G0601490] Funding Source: researchfish

向作者/读者索取更多资源

We postulated that changes in cardiac high-energy phosphate metabolism may underlie the myocardial dysfunction caused by hypobaric hypoxia. Healthy volunteers (n=14) were studied immediately before, and within 4 d of return from, a 17-d trek to Mt. Everest Base Camp (5300 m). (31)P magnetic resonance (MR) spectroscopy was used to measure cardiac phosphocreatine (PCr)/ATP, and MR imaging and echocardiography were used to assess cardiac volumes, mass, and function. Immediately after returning from Mt. Everest, total body weight had fallen by 3% (P<0.05), but left ventricular mass, adjusted for changes in body surface area, had disproportionately decreased by 11% (P<0.05). Alterations in diastolic function were also observed, with a reduction in peak left ventricular filling rates and mitral inflow E/A, by 17% (P<0.05) and 24% (P<0.01), respectively, with no change in hydration status. Compared with pretrek, cardiac PCr/ATP ratio had decreased by 18% (P<0.01). Whether the abnormalities were even greater at altitude is unknown, but all had returned to pretrek levels after 6 mo. The alterations in cardiac morphology, function, and energetics are similar to findings in patients with chronic hypoxia. Thus, a decrease in cardiac PCr/ATP may be a universal response to periods of sustained low oxygen availability, underlying hypoxia-induced cardiac dysfunction in healthy human heart and in patients with cardiopulmonary diseases.-Holloway, C. J., Montgomery, H. U., Murray, A. J., Cochlin, L. E., Codreanu, I. Hopwood, N., Johnson, A. W., Rider, O. J., Levett, D. Z. H., Tyler, D. J., Francis, J. M., Neubauer, S., Grocott, M. P. W., Clarke, K., for the Caudwell Xtreme Everest Research Group. Cardiac response to hypobaric hypoxia: persistent changes in cardiac mass, function, and energy metabolism after a trek to Mt. Everest Base Camp. FASEB J. 25, 792-796 (2011). www.fasebj.org

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