Artículos de revistas
Perinatal hypoxia increases susceptibility to high-altitude polycythemia and attendant pulmonary vascular dysfunction
Fecha
2015-04-27Institución
Resumen
Perinatal hypoxia increases susceptibility to high-altitude polycythemia and
attendant pulmonary vascular dysfunction. Am J Physiol Heart Circ
Physiol 309: H565–H573, 2015. First published June 19, 2015;
doi:10.1152/ajpheart.00296.2015.—Perinatal exposures exert a profound influence on physiological function, including developmental
processes vital for efficient pulmonary gas transfer throughout the
lifespan. We extend the concept of developmental programming to
chronic mountain sickness (CMS), a debilitating syndrome marked by
polycythemia, ventilatory impairment, and pulmonary hypertension
that affects 10% of male high-altitude residents. We hypothesized
that adverse perinatal oxygenation caused abnormalities of ventilatory
and/or pulmonary vascular function that increased susceptibility to
CMS in adulthood. Subjects were 67 male high-altitude (3,600–4,100
m) residents aged 18–25 yr with excessive erythrocytosis (EE, Hb
concentration 18.3 g/dl), a preclinical form of CMS, and 66 controls
identified from a community-based survey (n 981). EE subjects not
only had higher Hb concentrations and erythrocyte counts, but also
lower alveolar ventilation, impaired pulmonary diffusion capacity,
higher systolic pulmonary artery pressure, lower pulmonary artery
acceleration time, and more frequent right ventricular hypertrophy,
than controls. Compared with controls, EE subjects were more often
born to mothers experiencing hypertensive complications of pregnancy and hypoxia during the perinatal period, with each increasing
the risk of developing EE (odds ratio 5.25, P 0.05 and odds ratio
6.44, P 0.04, respectively) after other factors known to influence
EE status were taken into account. Adverse perinatal oxygenation is
associated with increased susceptibility to EE accompanied by modest
abnormalities of the pulmonary circulation that are independent of
increased blood viscosity. The association between perinatal hypoxia
and EE may be due to disrupted alveolarization and microvascular
development, leading to impaired gas exchange and/or pulmonary
hypertension.