Article
Chronic mountain sickness, optimal hemoglobin and heart disease
Fecha
2006-06Autor
Vargas, Enrique
Spielvogel, Hilde
Institución
Resumen
Abstract.
For the male inhabitants of La Paz, Bolivia
(3200–4100 m), and other high altitude regions in America and Asia, chronic mountain sickness
(CMS) is a major health problem. Since CMS was first described by Carlos Monge in the Peru
vian Andes in 1925, numerous research papers have been devoted to this topic, but many unan
swered questions still exist with respect to the beginning of the disease and its cause(s). The ex
perience with CMS has shown that an excessively high hemoglobin concentration is not favorable
for high altitude acclimatization, and the hypothesis of theoretically “optimal” hematocrit and
“optimal” hemoglobin has been made. The calculated optimal hemoglobin concentration of 14.7
g/dL for resting men in the Andes is discussed as theoretical and not applicable in real life. The
most frequent congenital and acquired heart diseases are discussed, such as patent ductus, atrial
septum defect, ventricle septum defect among congenital heart diseases and the still very fre
quent rheumatic valve cardiopathies and Chagas disease as acquired cardiopathies. Among the
typical acquired heart diseases of the high altitude dweller, special attention is given to chronic
cor pulmonale as a consequence of severe CMS with pulmonary hypertension.