Division of Biomedical Sciences, School of Medicine, University of California, Riverside, CA, USA.
Division of Pulmonary, Critical Care, Sleep Medicine and Physiology, School of Medicine, University of California, San Diego, CA, USA.
Physiol Rep. 2021 May;9(9):e14827. doi: 10.14814/phy2.14827.
Sojourners to high altitude often experience poor sleep quality due to sleep-disordered breathing. Additionally, multiple aspects of cognitive function are impaired at high altitude. However, the impact of acclimatization on sleep-disordered breathing and whether poor sleep is a major contributor to cognitive impairments at high altitude remains uncertain. We conducted nocturnal actigraphy and polygraphy, as well as daytime cognitive function tests, in 15 participants (33% women) at sea level and over 3 days of partial acclimatization to high altitude (3800 m). Our goal was to determine if sleep-disordered breathing improved over time and if sleep-disordered breathing was associated with cognitive function. The apnea-hypopnea index and oxygen desaturation index increased on night 1 (adj. p = 0.026 and adj. p = 0.026, respectively), but both improved over the subsequent 2 nights. These measures were matched by poorer self-reported sleep quality on the Stanford Sleepiness Scale and PROMIS questionnaires following 1 night at high altitude (adj. p = 0.027 and adj. p = 0.022, respectively). The reaction time on the psychomotor vigilance task was slower at high altitude and did not improve (SL: 199 ± 27, ALT1: 224 ± 33, ALT2: 216 ± 41, ALT3: 212 ± 27 ms). The reaction times on the balloon analog risk task decreased at high altitude (SL: 474 ± 235, ALT1: 375 ± 159, ALT2: 291 ± 102, ALT3: 267 ± 90 ms), perhaps indicating increased risk-taking behavior. Finally, multiple cognitive function measures were associated with sleep-disordered breathing and measures of subjective sleep quality, rather than low daytime arterial oxygen saturation. These data indicate that sleep-disordered breathing at moderately high altitude improves with partial acclimatization and that some aspects of cognitive performance in unacclimatized sojourners may be impacted by poor sleep rather than hypoxemia alone.
移居高海拔地区的人常因睡眠呼吸障碍而导致睡眠质量差。此外,在高海拔地区,认知功能的多个方面都会受到损害。然而,适应对睡眠呼吸障碍的影响,以及睡眠质量差是否是高海拔地区认知障碍的主要原因仍不确定。我们对 15 名参与者(33%为女性)进行了夜间活动和多导睡眠图以及日间认知功能测试,这些参与者在海平面和高海拔地区(3800 米)适应了 3 天后。我们的目标是确定睡眠呼吸障碍是否随着时间的推移而改善,以及睡眠呼吸障碍是否与认知功能有关。呼吸暂停低通气指数和氧减饱和指数在第 1 晚增加(调整后 p 值分别为 0.026 和 0.026),但在随后的 2 晚均有所改善。这些措施与斯坦福嗜睡量表和 PROMIS 问卷在高海拔地区第 1 晚报告的睡眠质量较差相匹配(调整后 p 值分别为 0.027 和 0.022)。高海拔地区的精神运动警觉任务的反应时间较慢,且无改善(SL:199±27,ALT1:224±33,ALT2:216±41,ALT3:212±27 ms)。高海拔地区的气球模拟风险任务的反应时间下降(SL:474±235,ALT1:375±159,ALT2:291±102,ALT3:267±90 ms),这可能表明冒险行为增加。最后,多项认知功能测量与睡眠呼吸障碍和主观睡眠质量测量相关,而与白天动脉血氧饱和度低无关。这些数据表明,中度高海拔地区的睡眠呼吸障碍随着部分适应而改善,并且未适应的旅行者的某些认知表现方面可能受到睡眠质量差的影响,而不仅仅是低氧血症。