Healy Katherine, Labrique Alain B, Miranda J Jaime, Gilman Robert H, Danz David, Davila-Roman Victor G, Huicho Luis, León-Velarde Fabiola, Checkley William
1 Division of Pulmonary and Critical Care, School of Medicine, Johns Hopkins University , Baltimore, Maryland.
2 Program in Global Disease Epidemiology and Control, Department of International Health, Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health , Baltimore, Maryland.
High Alt Med Biol. 2016 Sep;17(3):208-213. doi: 10.1089/ham.2016.0041. Epub 2016 Jul 25.
Healy, Katherine, Alain B. Labrique, J. Jaime Miranda, Robert H. Gilman, David Danz, Victor G. Davila-Roman, Luis Huicho, Fabiola León-Velarde, and William Checkley. Dark adaptation at high altitude: an unexpected pupillary response to chronic hypoxia in Andean highlanders. High Alt Med Biol. 17:208-213, 2016.-Chronic mountain sickness is a maladaptive response to high altitude (>2500 m above sea level) and is characterized by excessive erythrocytosis and hypoxemia resulting from long-term hypobaric hypoxia. There is no known early predictor of chronic mountain sickness and the diagnosis is based on the presence of excessive erythrocytosis and clinical features. Impaired dark adaptation, or an inability to visually adjust from high- to low-light settings, occurs in response to mild hypoxia and may serve as an early predictor of hypoxemia and chronic mountain sickness. We aimed to evaluate the association between pupillary response assessed by dark adaptometry and daytime hypoxemia in resident Andean highlanders aged ≥35 years living in Puno, Peru. Oxyhemoglobin saturation (SpO) was recorded using a handheld pulse oximeter. Dark adaptation was quantitatively assessed as the magnitude of pupillary contraction to light stimuli of varying intensities (-2.9 to 0.1 log-cd/m) using a portable dark adaptometer. Individual- and stimulus-specific multilevel analyses were conducted using mixed-effect models to elicit the relationship between SpO and pupillary responsiveness. Among 93 participants, mean age was 54.9 ± 11.0 years, 48% were male, 44% were night blind, and mean SpO was 89.3% ± 3.4%. The magnitude of pupillary contraction was greater with lower SpO (p < 0.01), and this dose relationship remained significant in multiple variable analyses (p = 0.047). Pupillary responsiveness to light stimuli under dark-adapted conditions was exaggerated with hypoxemia and may serve as an early predictor of chronic mountain sickness. This unexpected association is potentially explained as an excessive and unregulated sympathetic response to hypoxemia at altitude.
希利、凯瑟琳、阿兰·B·拉布里克、J·海梅·米兰达、罗伯特·H·吉尔曼、大卫·丹兹、维克托·G·达维拉 - 罗曼、路易斯·惠乔、法比奥拉·莱昂 - 贝拉尔代以及威廉·切克利。高海拔地区的暗适应:安第斯高地居民对慢性缺氧的意外瞳孔反应。《高海拔医学与生物学》。2016年第17卷,第208 - 213页。——慢性高山病是对高海拔(海拔>2500米)的一种适应不良反应,其特征是长期低压缺氧导致的红细胞增多和低氧血症。目前尚无已知的慢性高山病早期预测指标,诊断基于红细胞增多的存在及临床特征。暗适应受损,即无法从强光环境视觉调整到弱光环境,会因轻度缺氧而出现,可能是低氧血症和慢性高山病的早期预测指标。我们旨在评估在秘鲁普诺居住的年龄≥35岁的安第斯高地居民中,通过暗适应测量评估的瞳孔反应与日间低氧血症之间的关联。使用手持式脉搏血氧仪记录氧合血红蛋白饱和度(SpO)。使用便携式暗适应仪,将暗适应定量评估为对不同强度(-2.9至0.1对数坎德拉/平方米)光刺激的瞳孔收缩幅度。使用混合效应模型进行个体和刺激特异性的多水平分析,以得出SpO与瞳孔反应性之间的关系。在93名参与者中,平均年龄为54.9±11.0岁,48%为男性,44%有夜盲症,平均SpO为89.3%±3.4%。SpO越低,瞳孔收缩幅度越大(p<0.01),且这种剂量关系在多变量分析中仍显著(p = 0.047)。在暗适应条件下,低氧血症会使对光刺激的瞳孔反应性增强,这可能是慢性高山病的早期预测指标。这种意外关联可能解释为在高海拔地区对低氧血症的过度且不受调节的交感神经反应。