Lanfranchi Paola A, Colombo Roberto, Cremona George, Baderna Paolo, Spagnolatti Liliana, Mazzuero Giorgio, Wagner Peter, Perini Liliana, Wagner Harrieth, Cavallaro Carmelo, Giannuzzi Pantaleo
Centre de Recherche, Hôpital du Sacré-Coeur, 5400 boul. Gouin Ouest, Montreal, QC, Canada H4J 1C5.
Am J Physiol Heart Circ Physiol. 2005 Dec;289(6):H2364-72. doi: 10.1152/ajpheart.00004.2005. Epub 2005 Jul 29.
The aims of this study were 1) to evaluate whether subjects suffering from acute mountain sickness (AMS) during exposure to high altitude have signs of autonomic dysfunction and 2) to verify whether autonomic variables at low altitude may identify subjects who are prone to develop AMS. Forty-one mountaineers were studied at 4,559-m altitude. AMS was diagnosed using the Lake Louise score, and autonomic cardiovascular function was explored using spectral analysis of R-R interval and blood pressure (BP) variability on 10-min resting recordings. Seventeen subjects (41%) had AMS. Subjects with AMS were older than those without AMS (P < 0.01). At high altitude, the low-frequency (LF) component of systolic BP variability (LF(SBP)) was higher (P = 0.02) and the LF component of R-R variability in normalized units (LF(RR)NU) was lower (P = 0.001) in subjects with AMS. After 3 mo, 21 subjects (43% with AMS) repeated the evaluation at low altitude at rest and in response to a hypoxic gas mixture. LF(RR)NU was similar in the two groups at baseline and during hypoxia at low altitude but increased only in subjects without AMS at high altitude (P < 0.001) and did not change between low and high altitude in subjects with AMS. Conversely, LF(SBP) increased significantly during short-term hypoxia only in subjects with AMS, who also had higher resting BP (P < 0.05) than those without AMS. Autonomic cardiovascular dysfunction accompanies AMS. Marked LF(SBP) response to short-term hypoxia identifies AMS-prone subjects, supporting the potential role of an exaggerated individual chemoreflex vasoconstrictive response to hypoxia in the genesis of AMS.
1)评估在高海拔暴露期间患有急性高原病(AMS)的受试者是否有自主神经功能障碍的迹象;2)验证低海拔时的自主神经变量是否可识别易患AMS的受试者。对41名登山者在海拔4559米处进行了研究。使用路易斯湖评分法诊断AMS,并通过对10分钟静息记录的R-R间期和血压(BP)变异性进行频谱分析来探究自主心血管功能。17名受试者(41%)患有AMS。患有AMS的受试者比未患AMS的受试者年龄更大(P<0.01)。在高海拔时,患有AMS的受试者收缩压变异性的低频(LF)成分(LF(SBP))更高(P=0.02),标准化单位下R-R变异性的LF成分(LF(RR)NU)更低(P=0.001)。3个月后,21名受试者(43%患有AMS)在低海拔静息状态下以及对低氧混合气体反应时重复进行了评估。两组在基线时以及低海拔低氧期间的LF(RR)NU相似,但仅在高海拔未患AMS的受试者中增加(P<0.001),而患有AMS的受试者在低海拔和高海拔之间没有变化。相反,仅在患有AMS的受试者中,短期低氧期间LF(SBP)显著增加,这些受试者的静息血压也高于未患AMS的受试者(P<0.05)。自主心血管功能障碍与AMS相伴。对短期低氧有明显的LF(SBP)反应可识别易患AMS的受试者,支持了个体对低氧的化学反射性血管收缩反应过度在AMS发生中的潜在作用。