Departmment of Translational Pneumology, University Hospital Heidelberg, Heidelberg, Germany.
Translational Lung Research Center Heidelberg, Member of the German Center for Lung Research, Heidelberg, Germany.
J Appl Physiol (1985). 2020 Dec 1;129(6):1451-1459. doi: 10.1152/japplphysiol.00025.2020. Epub 2020 Oct 1.
Increasing the hemoglobin (Hb) concentration is a major mechanism adjusting arterial oxygen content to decreased oxygen partial pressure of inspired air at high altitude. Approximately 5% of the world's population living at altitudes higher than 1,500 m shows this adaptive mechanism. Notably, there is a wide variation in the extent of increase in Hb concentration among different populations. This short review summarizes available information on Hb concentrations of high-altitude residents living at comparable altitudes (3,500-4,500 m) in different regions of the world. An increased Hb concentration is found in all high-altitude populations. The highest mean Hb concentration was found in adult male Andean residents and in Han Chinese living at high altitude, whereas it was lowest in Ethiopians, Tibetans, and Sherpas. A lower plasma volume in Andean high-altitude natives may offer a partial explanation. Indeed, male Andean high-altitude natives have a lower plasma volume than Tibetans and Ethiopians. Moreover, Hb values were lower in adult, nonpregnant females than in males; differences between populations of different ancestry were less pronounced. Various genetic polymorphisms were detected in high-altitude residents thought to favor life in a hypoxic environment, some of which correlate with the relatively low Hb concentration in the Tibetans and Ethiopians, whereas differences in angiotensin-converting enzyme allele distribution may be related to elevated Hb in the Andeans. Taken together, these results indicate different sensitivity of oxygen dependent control of erythropoiesis or plasma volume among populations of different geographical ancestry, offering explanations for differences in the Hb concentration at high altitude.
升高血红蛋白(Hb)浓度是调节动脉血氧含量以适应高海拔地区吸入空气氧分压降低的主要机制。大约有 5%生活在海拔 1500 米以上的世界人口具有这种适应机制。值得注意的是,不同人群中 Hb 浓度的增加幅度存在很大差异。本综述总结了世界不同地区生活在可比海拔(3500-4500 米)的高原居民的 Hb 浓度的现有信息。所有高原人群的 Hb 浓度均升高。安第斯高原居民和居住在高海拔地区的汉族男性的平均 Hb 浓度最高,而埃塞俄比亚人、藏人和夏尔巴人的 Hb 浓度最低。安第斯高原原住民较低的血浆量可能提供了部分解释。事实上,安第斯高原原住民男性的血浆量低于藏人和埃塞俄比亚人。此外,成年非妊娠女性的 Hb 值低于男性;不同人群之间的差异不那么明显。在高原居民中发现了多种被认为有利于低氧环境生存的遗传多态性,其中一些与藏人和埃塞俄比亚人相对较低的 Hb 浓度相关,而血管紧张素转换酶等位基因分布的差异可能与安第斯人 Hb 的升高有关。总之,这些结果表明,不同地理起源的人群对红细胞生成或血浆量的氧依赖性控制的敏感性不同,这为高海拔地区 Hb 浓度的差异提供了解释。