Aviation Medicine Unit, Royal New Zealand Air Force Base Auckland, Whenuapai, Auckland, New Zealand.
Department of Exercise Sciences, University of Auckland, Auckland, New Zealand.
PLoS One. 2023 Aug 16;18(8):e0289716. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0289716. eCollection 2023.
Recovery of cognitive and physiological responses following a hypoxic exposure may not be considered in various operational and research settings. Understanding recovery profiles and influential factors can guide post-hypoxia restrictions to reduce the risk of further cognitive and physiological deterioration, and the potential for incidents and accidents. We systematically evaluated the available evidence on recovery of cognitive and basic physiological responses following an acute hypoxic exposure to improve understanding of the performance and safety implications, and to inform post-hypoxia restrictions. This systematic review summarises 30 studies that document the recovery of either a cognitive or physiological index from an acute hypoxic exposure. Titles and abstracts from PubMed (MEDLINE) and Scopus were searched from inception to July 2022, of which 22 full text articles were considered eligible. An additional 8 articles from other sources were identified and also considered eligible. The overall quality of evidence was moderate (average Rosendal score, 58%) and there was a large range of hypoxic exposures. Heart rate, peripheral blood haemoglobin-oxygen saturation and heart rate variability typically normalised within seconds-to-minutes following return to normoxia or hyperoxia. Whereas, cognitive performance, blood pressure, cerebral tissue oxygenation, ventilation and electroencephalogram indices could persist for minutes-to-hours following a hypoxic exposure, and one study suggested regional cerebral tissue oxygenation requires up to 24 hours to recover. Full recovery of most cognitive and physiological indices, however, appear much sooner and typically within ~2-4 hours. Based on these findings, there is evidence to support a 'hypoxia hangover' and a need to implement restrictions following acute hypoxic exposures. The severity and duration of these restrictions is unclear but should consider the population, subsequent requirement for safety-critical tasks and hypoxic exposure.
在各种操作和研究环境中,可能不会考虑缺氧暴露后认知和生理反应的恢复。了解恢复情况和影响因素可以指导缺氧后限制,以降低进一步认知和生理恶化的风险,以及潜在的事件和事故的风险。我们系统地评估了急性缺氧暴露后认知和基本生理反应恢复的现有证据,以提高对性能和安全影响的理解,并为缺氧后限制提供信息。本系统评价总结了 30 项研究,这些研究记录了急性缺氧暴露后认知或生理指标的恢复情况。从开始到 2022 年 7 月,在 PubMed(MEDLINE)和 Scopus 中搜索了标题和摘要,其中 22 篇全文文章被认为符合条件。还从其他来源确定并认为符合条件的另外 8 篇文章。证据的总体质量为中等(平均 Rosendal 评分 58%),并且有很大范围的缺氧暴露。心率、外周血血红蛋白-氧饱和度和心率变异性通常在返回常氧或高氧后几秒钟到几分钟内恢复正常。然而,认知表现、血压、脑氧合、通气和脑电图指数在缺氧暴露后可能持续数分钟到数小时,一项研究表明,区域脑氧合需要长达 24 小时才能恢复。然而,大多数认知和生理指数的完全恢复似乎要早得多,通常在~2-4 小时内。基于这些发现,有证据支持“缺氧宿醉”,并需要在急性缺氧暴露后实施限制。这些限制的严重程度和持续时间尚不清楚,但应考虑人群、随后对安全关键任务的要求和缺氧暴露。