Weitz C A, Garruto R M, Chin Chen-Ting, Liu Ji-Chuan
Department of Anthropology, Temple University, Philadelphia, PA 19122, USA.
Ann Hum Biol. 2004 May-Jun;31(3):292-310. doi: 10.1080/0301446042000196316.
Studies comparing the growth of indigenous high-altitude Aymara children and children of low-altitude European descent who have been born and raised at high altitude in the Andes have provided evidence for genetically-determined differences in thorax growth, as well as for population differences in height, weight and other measures of overall size. Comparable studies now can be undertaken in Asia because of the growing number of Han Chinese who have been born and raised at high altitude on the Qinghai-Tibetan Plateau.
The study compares the growth of indigenous Tibetan children and children of Han descent who have been born and raised at the same high altitudes, and under similar socio-economic conditions.
Measurements of stature, sitting height, weight, triceps and subscapular skinfolds, upper arm muscle area, transverse chest diameter, anterio-posterior chest diameter, and chest circumference were taken on 1439 Tibetan and Han males and females between the ages of 6 and 29 years who were born and raised 3200 m, 3800 m or at 4300 m in the high altitude province of Qinghai in western China.
Han-Tibetan differences in body size do not occur systematically for any measurement, for any age group, or for either gender; nor is there a systematic pattern of body size differences between 3200 m and 4300 m. This indicates that there are no differences in general growth between the two groups at high altitude in Qinghai, although both groups grow more slowly than urban children at low altitude in China. On the other hand, Tibetan males possess significantly deeper chests than Han males, and Tibetan females possess significantly wider chests than Han females. Tibetans of both sexes possess significantly larger chest circumferences than Han males and females.
Although genetic similarities cannot be ruled out, comparable dietary stress is a likely explanation for the similar and slow morphological growth of Han and Tibetans at high altitude. However, Han-Tibetan differences in thorax dimensions are likely a consequence of population (genetic) differences in the response to hypoxia during growth.
比较安第斯山脉高海拔地区土生土长的艾马拉儿童与出生并成长于该地区的低海拔欧洲裔儿童生长情况的研究,为胸廓生长的基因决定差异以及身高、体重和其他总体尺寸测量方面的人群差异提供了证据。由于在中国青藏高原高海拔地区出生并长大的汉族人口不断增加,现在可以在亚洲开展类似研究。
本研究比较了在相同高海拔地区、相似社会经济条件下出生并长大的藏族本土儿童和汉族儿童的生长情况。
对1439名年龄在6至29岁之间的藏族和汉族男性及女性进行了测量,这些人出生并成长于中国西部青海省海拔3200米、3800米或4300米的高海拔地区,测量项目包括身高、坐高、体重、肱三头肌和肩胛下皮褶厚度、上臂肌肉面积、胸部横径、前后胸径和胸围。
在任何测量项目、任何年龄组或任何性别中,汉族和藏族在体型上均未出现系统性差异;在海拔3200米至4300米之间也没有体型差异的系统性模式。这表明,在青海高海拔地区,两组人群的总体生长情况没有差异,尽管两组的生长速度都比中国低海拔城市儿童慢。另一方面,藏族男性的胸廓明显比汉族男性深,藏族女性的胸廓明显比汉族女性宽。藏族男女的胸围均明显大于汉族男性和女性。
尽管不能排除基因相似性,但类似的饮食压力可能是汉族和藏族在高海拔地区形态生长相似且缓慢的原因。然而,汉族和藏族在胸廓尺寸上的差异可能是生长过程中对缺氧反应的人群(基因)差异所致。