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Ventilation and hypoxic ventilatory responsiveness in Chinese-Tibetan residents at 3,658 m

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Curran, Linda S., Jianguo Zhuang, Shin Fu Sun, and Lorna G. Moore. Ventilation and hypoxic ventilatory responsiveness in Chinese-Tibetan residents at 3,658 m. J. Appl. Physiol. 83(6): 2098–2104, 1997.—When breathing ambient air at rest at 3,658 m altitude, Tibetan lifelong residents of 3,658 m ventilate as much as newcomers acclimatized to high altitude; they also ventilate more and have greater hypoxic ventilatory responses (HVRs) than do Han (“Chinese”) long-term residents at 3,658 m. This suggests that Tibetan ancestry is advantageous in protecting resting ventilation levels during years of hypoxic exposure and is of interest in light of the permissive role of hypoventilation in the development of chronic mountain sickness, which is nearly absent among Tibetans. The existence of individuals with mixed Tibetan-Chinese ancestry (Han-Tibetans) residing at 3,658 m affords an opportunity to test this hypothesis. Eighteen men born in Lhasa, Tibet, China (3,658 m) to Tibetan mothers and Han fathers were compared with 27 Tibetan men and 30 Han men residing at 3,658 m who were previously studied. We used the same study procedures (minute ventilation was measured with a dry-gas flowmeter during room air breathing and hyperoxia and with a 13-liter spirometer-rebreathing system during the hypoxic and hypercapnic tests). During room air breathing at 3,658 m (inspired O2 pressure = 93 Torr), Han-Tibetans resembled Tibetans in ventilation (12.1 ± 0.6 vs. 11.5± 0.5 l/min btps, respectively) but had HVR that were blunted (63 ± 16 vs. 121 ± 13, respectively, for HVR shape parameter A) and declined with increasing duration of high-altitude residence. During administered hyperoxia (inspired O2 pressure = 310 Torr) at 3,658 m, the paradoxical hyperventilation previously seen in Tibetan but not Han residents at 3,658 m (11.8 ± 0.5 vs. 10.1 ± 0.5 l/min btps) was absent in these Han-Tibetans (9.8 ± 0.6 l/minbtps). Thus, although longer duration of high-altitude residence appears to progressively blunt HVR among Han-Tibetans born and residing at 3,658 m, their Tibetan ancestry appears protective in their maintenance of high resting ventilation levels despite diminished chemosensitivity.
Title: Ventilation and hypoxic ventilatory responsiveness in Chinese-Tibetan residents at 3,658 m
Description:
Curran, Linda S.
, Jianguo Zhuang, Shin Fu Sun, and Lorna G.
Moore.
Ventilation and hypoxic ventilatory responsiveness in Chinese-Tibetan residents at 3,658 m.
J.
Appl.
Physiol.
83(6): 2098–2104, 1997.
—When breathing ambient air at rest at 3,658 m altitude, Tibetan lifelong residents of 3,658 m ventilate as much as newcomers acclimatized to high altitude; they also ventilate more and have greater hypoxic ventilatory responses (HVRs) than do Han (“Chinese”) long-term residents at 3,658 m.
This suggests that Tibetan ancestry is advantageous in protecting resting ventilation levels during years of hypoxic exposure and is of interest in light of the permissive role of hypoventilation in the development of chronic mountain sickness, which is nearly absent among Tibetans.
The existence of individuals with mixed Tibetan-Chinese ancestry (Han-Tibetans) residing at 3,658 m affords an opportunity to test this hypothesis.
Eighteen men born in Lhasa, Tibet, China (3,658 m) to Tibetan mothers and Han fathers were compared with 27 Tibetan men and 30 Han men residing at 3,658 m who were previously studied.
We used the same study procedures (minute ventilation was measured with a dry-gas flowmeter during room air breathing and hyperoxia and with a 13-liter spirometer-rebreathing system during the hypoxic and hypercapnic tests).
During room air breathing at 3,658 m (inspired O2 pressure = 93 Torr), Han-Tibetans resembled Tibetans in ventilation (12.
1 ± 0.
6 vs.
11.
5± 0.
5 l/min btps, respectively) but had HVR that were blunted (63 ± 16 vs.
121 ± 13, respectively, for HVR shape parameter A) and declined with increasing duration of high-altitude residence.
During administered hyperoxia (inspired O2 pressure = 310 Torr) at 3,658 m, the paradoxical hyperventilation previously seen in Tibetan but not Han residents at 3,658 m (11.
8 ± 0.
5 vs.
10.
1 ± 0.
5 l/min btps) was absent in these Han-Tibetans (9.
8 ± 0.
6 l/minbtps).
Thus, although longer duration of high-altitude residence appears to progressively blunt HVR among Han-Tibetans born and residing at 3,658 m, their Tibetan ancestry appears protective in their maintenance of high resting ventilation levels despite diminished chemosensitivity.

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