Ucrós Santiago, Castro-Guevara Javier A, Hill Catherine M, Castro-Rodriguez Jose A
Department of Pediatrics, School of Medicine, Universidad de los Andes, Fundación Santa Fe de Bogotá, Bogotá, Colombia.
School of Medicine, Pontificia Universidad Católica de Chile, Santiago, Chile.
Front Pediatr. 2022 Feb 28;9:798310. doi: 10.3389/fped.2021.798310. eCollection 2021.
Human respiratory physiology changes significantly in high altitude settings and these changes are particularly marked during sleep. It is estimated that 170 million people live above 2,500 m in environments where normal sleep parameters differ from those established at sea level or low altitude.
We conducted a systematic review of publications reporting sleep studies in healthy children living at high altitude. For this purpose, data from PubMed, EMBASE, SciELO and Epistemomikos bases were retrieved up to August 2021.
Six articles met specified inclusion criteria; all reporting data were from South America involving 245 children (404 sleep studies) in children aged 0.6 months to 18 years, at altitudes between 2,560 to 3,775 m. The main results were: (1) Central apnea index decreased as the age increased. (2) The obstructive apnea/hypopnea index showed a bimodal profile with an increase in young infants up to age of 4 months, decreasing to 15 months of age, and then a second peak in children aged 4 to 9 years of age, dropping in older schoolchildren and adolescents. (3) Periodic breathing in the first months of life is more marked with increasing altitude and decreases with age.
There are few studies of sleep physiology in children living at high altitude. The international parameters defining normal apnea indices currently used at low altitude cannot be applied to high altitude settings. The interpretation of sleep studies in children living at high altitude is complex because there are important developmental changes across childhood and a wide range of altitude locations. More normative data are required to determine thresholds for respiratory pathology at a variety of high altitude settings.
人类呼吸生理在高海拔环境中会发生显著变化,且这些变化在睡眠期间尤为明显。据估计,有1.7亿人生活在海拔2500米以上的环境中,在这些环境中,正常睡眠参数与海平面或低海拔地区所确定的参数不同。
我们对报告高海拔地区健康儿童睡眠研究的出版物进行了系统综述。为此,检索了截至2021年8月来自PubMed、EMBASE、SciELO和Epistemomikos数据库的数据。
6篇文章符合指定的纳入标准;所有报告的数据均来自南美洲,涉及245名年龄在0.6个月至18岁之间、海拔在2560至3775米的儿童(404项睡眠研究)。主要结果如下:(1)中枢性呼吸暂停指数随年龄增长而降低。(2)阻塞性呼吸暂停/低通气指数呈现双峰模式,在4个月龄以下的幼儿中升高,到15个月龄时下降,然后在4至9岁儿童中出现第二个峰值,在大龄学童和青少年中下降。(3)生命最初几个月的周期性呼吸在海拔升高时更为明显,并随年龄增长而减少。
关于高海拔地区儿童睡眠生理的研究较少。目前在低海拔地区使用的定义正常呼吸暂停指数的国际参数不能应用于高海拔环境。对高海拔地区儿童睡眠研究的解读很复杂,因为儿童期存在重要的发育变化,且海拔地点范围广泛。需要更多的规范性数据来确定各种高海拔环境下呼吸病理学的阈值。