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BAJO RIESGO DE DÉFICIT ATENCIONAL / HIPERACTIVIDAD EN NIÑOS AYMARÁS: IMPLICANCIAS GENÉTICAS, ANTROPOLÓGICAS Y CULTURALES
(Universidad de Tarapacá<br>Facultad de Ciencias Sociales y Jurídicas<br>Departamento de Antropología, 2005)
Respiratory and hematological adaptations of young and older aymara men native to 3600M
(American Journal of Human Biology, 1992)
ABSTRACT. This paper reports the results of a study designed to test the
hypothesis that an inevitable concomitant of aging at high altitudes is chronic
mountain sickness resulting from excess erythrocytosis secondary ...
Autosomal and X chromosome alu insertions in Bolivian aymaras and quechuas : two languages and one genetic pool
(American Journal of Human Biology, 2010)
A B S T R A C T Thirty-two polymorphic Alu insertions (18 autosomal and 14 from the X chromosome) were studied in
192 individuals from two Amerindian populations of the Bolivian Altiplano (Aymara and Quechua speakers: the ...
Attention deficit hyperactivity disorder in Aymara children Trastorno por déficit de atención e hiperactividad en niños aymara: Primera aproximación clínica
(2012)
Background: The assessment of Attentional Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD) among ethnic groups may reveal environmental or cultural variables that influence the appearance of this disorder. Aim: To assess the presence ...
Aymara children are protected from high-altitude-induced pulmonary hypertension
(High Altitude Medicine & Biology, 2005-02-22)
Pulmonary hypertension is a hallmark of the adaptation to ambient lack of oxygen. This assumption is also
thought to hold true for high-altitude native children,
since invasive studies showed elevated pulmonary-artery
pressure ...
Perinatal variables from newborns of Aymara mothers suggest a genetic adaptation to high altitude Variables perinatales de recién nacidos de madres Aymara sugieren adaptación genética a la altura
(Sociedad Medica de Santiago, 2014)
© 2014, Sociedad Medica de Santiago. All rights reserved. Background: Studies performed in Andean populations living in high altitude, indicate that the reduced availability of oxygen could be associated to both a fetal ...
Uterine artery blood flow during pregnancy in high-altitude aymara women
(High Altitude Medicine & Biology, 2003-02-19)
Background: Birth weight falls with increasing altitude as the result of
intrauterine growth restriction (IUGR) likely due, in turn, to lower uterine artery (UtA) blood flow. The altitude-associated birth weight decline
is ...
FESTIVIDADES ANDINAS Y RELIGIOSIDAD EN EL NORTE CHILENO
(Universidad de Tarapacá<br>Facultad de Ciencias Sociales y Jurídicas<br>Departamento de Antropología, 2009)
High-altitude haematology: Quechua-Aymara comparisons
(Annals of Human Biology, 1981)
Summary. Haematological studies have been carried out al various altitudes between 450 m
and 4800 m, on two separate human groups (Quechuas and Aymaras) living in South America.
Changes in the haematological parameters ...
Haematology and erythrocyte metabolism in man at high altitude : an aymara-quechua comparison
(American Journal of Physical Anthroplogy, 1985)
ABSTRACT In the course of haematological and biological investigations
among Aymara and Quechua populations in Bolivia, an anthropological study
of the erythrocytary respiratory function was carried out on the two groups ...