Department of Internal Medicine, University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center, Dallas, Texas 75390, USA.
Am J Med Sci. 2010 Jul;340(1):69-77. doi: 10.1097/MAJ.0b013e3181d3cdbe.
With increasing altitude, there is a fall in barometric pressure and a progressive fall in the partial pressure of oxygen. Acclimatization describes the physiologic changes that help maintain tissue oxygen delivery and human performance in the setting of hypobaric hypoxemia. These changes include a marked increase in alveolar ventilation, increased hemoglobin concentration and affinity, and increased tissue oxygen extraction. In some individuals, these physiologic changes may be inadequate, such that the sojourn to altitude and the attendant hypoxia are complicated by altitude-associated medical illness. The rate of ascent, the absolute change in altitude, and individual physiology are the primary determinants whether illness will develop or not. The most common clinical manifestations of altitude illness are acute mountain sickness, high altitude pulmonary edema, and high altitude cerebral edema.
随着海拔的升高,气压下降,氧气分压也逐渐下降。适应描述了有助于维持组织氧输送和人体在低气压低氧环境下表现的生理变化。这些变化包括肺泡通气量显著增加、血红蛋白浓度和亲和力增加以及组织氧摄取增加。在某些人中,这些生理变化可能不足,以至于到达高海拔地区和随之而来的缺氧会使与高海拔相关的疾病复杂化。上升速度、海拔的绝对变化和个体生理学是疾病是否会发展的主要决定因素。高原病最常见的临床表现是急性高原病、高原肺水肿和高原脑水肿。