Does chronic mountain sickness (CMS) have perinatal origins?

Abstract. Chronic mountain sickness (CMS) occurs in 10% of male high-altitude residents. It is characterized by hypoventilation and hypoxemia but its underlying cause remains unknown. We hypothesized that CMS' origins reside in exaggerated perinatal hypoxia that server, in turn, to impair the development of pulmonary structure and/or respiratory control. As a preliminary test, we asked if birth weights were low and other signs of perinatal hypoxia were present in 12 young men with excessive erythrocytosis (EE, Hb> 18.3 g/dL), a condition thought to be a preclinical phase of CMS. Their birth weights were uniformly low (2571+-243g) and all but one demonstrated perinatl hypoxia as manifested either by being small for their gestational age (SGA, 8%), preterm (67%), born to a preeclamptic (PE) mother (50%), or diagnosed with neonatal hypoxia (83%). Impaired growth in utero has been shown to raise susceptibility to adult disease; these are the first data to demonstrate a possible influence of reduced fetal growth and/or exaggerated perinatal hypoxia on increasing the susceptibility to CMS. future studies, with more detailed testing in larger samples of control as well as EE subjects, with longitudinal follow-up, are required to determine the role of perinatal hypoxiain the development of CMS.

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Moore, Lorna G, Niermeyer, Susan, Vargas, Enrique
Format: Article biblioteca
Language:English
Published: Respiratory Physiology & Neurobiology 2007-06-29
Subjects:PESO AL NACER, HIPOXIA, GRAN ALTURA, IUGR, SGA, PREECLAMPSIA,
Online Access:http://repositorio.umsa.bo/xmlui/handle/123456789/8599
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spelling oai:localhost:8080:123456789-85992020-09-22T15:42:49Z Does chronic mountain sickness (CMS) have perinatal origins? Moore, Lorna G Niermeyer, Susan Vargas, Enrique PESO AL NACER HIPOXIA GRAN ALTURA IUGR SGA PREECLAMPSIA Abstract. Chronic mountain sickness (CMS) occurs in 10% of male high-altitude residents. It is characterized by hypoventilation and hypoxemia but its underlying cause remains unknown. We hypothesized that CMS' origins reside in exaggerated perinatal hypoxia that server, in turn, to impair the development of pulmonary structure and/or respiratory control. As a preliminary test, we asked if birth weights were low and other signs of perinatal hypoxia were present in 12 young men with excessive erythrocytosis (EE, Hb> 18.3 g/dL), a condition thought to be a preclinical phase of CMS. Their birth weights were uniformly low (2571+-243g) and all but one demonstrated perinatl hypoxia as manifested either by being small for their gestational age (SGA, 8%), preterm (67%), born to a preeclamptic (PE) mother (50%), or diagnosed with neonatal hypoxia (83%). Impaired growth in utero has been shown to raise susceptibility to adult disease; these are the first data to demonstrate a possible influence of reduced fetal growth and/or exaggerated perinatal hypoxia on increasing the susceptibility to CMS. future studies, with more detailed testing in larger samples of control as well as EE subjects, with longitudinal follow-up, are required to determine the role of perinatal hypoxiain the development of CMS. 2016-10-24T16:03:20Z 2016-10-24T16:03:20Z 2007-06-29 Article http://repositorio.umsa.bo/xmlui/handle/123456789/8599 en application/pdf Respiratory Physiology & Neurobiology
institution UMSA BO
collection DSpace
country Bolivia
countrycode BO
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
databasecode dig-umsa-bo
tag biblioteca
region America del Sur
libraryname Sistema de Unidades de Información de UMSA
language English
topic PESO AL NACER
HIPOXIA
GRAN ALTURA
IUGR
SGA
PREECLAMPSIA
PESO AL NACER
HIPOXIA
GRAN ALTURA
IUGR
SGA
PREECLAMPSIA
spellingShingle PESO AL NACER
HIPOXIA
GRAN ALTURA
IUGR
SGA
PREECLAMPSIA
PESO AL NACER
HIPOXIA
GRAN ALTURA
IUGR
SGA
PREECLAMPSIA
Moore, Lorna G
Niermeyer, Susan
Vargas, Enrique
Does chronic mountain sickness (CMS) have perinatal origins?
description Abstract. Chronic mountain sickness (CMS) occurs in 10% of male high-altitude residents. It is characterized by hypoventilation and hypoxemia but its underlying cause remains unknown. We hypothesized that CMS' origins reside in exaggerated perinatal hypoxia that server, in turn, to impair the development of pulmonary structure and/or respiratory control. As a preliminary test, we asked if birth weights were low and other signs of perinatal hypoxia were present in 12 young men with excessive erythrocytosis (EE, Hb> 18.3 g/dL), a condition thought to be a preclinical phase of CMS. Their birth weights were uniformly low (2571+-243g) and all but one demonstrated perinatl hypoxia as manifested either by being small for their gestational age (SGA, 8%), preterm (67%), born to a preeclamptic (PE) mother (50%), or diagnosed with neonatal hypoxia (83%). Impaired growth in utero has been shown to raise susceptibility to adult disease; these are the first data to demonstrate a possible influence of reduced fetal growth and/or exaggerated perinatal hypoxia on increasing the susceptibility to CMS. future studies, with more detailed testing in larger samples of control as well as EE subjects, with longitudinal follow-up, are required to determine the role of perinatal hypoxiain the development of CMS.
format Article
topic_facet PESO AL NACER
HIPOXIA
GRAN ALTURA
IUGR
SGA
PREECLAMPSIA
author Moore, Lorna G
Niermeyer, Susan
Vargas, Enrique
author_facet Moore, Lorna G
Niermeyer, Susan
Vargas, Enrique
author_sort Moore, Lorna G
title Does chronic mountain sickness (CMS) have perinatal origins?
title_short Does chronic mountain sickness (CMS) have perinatal origins?
title_full Does chronic mountain sickness (CMS) have perinatal origins?
title_fullStr Does chronic mountain sickness (CMS) have perinatal origins?
title_full_unstemmed Does chronic mountain sickness (CMS) have perinatal origins?
title_sort does chronic mountain sickness (cms) have perinatal origins?
publisher Respiratory Physiology & Neurobiology
publishDate 2007-06-29
url http://repositorio.umsa.bo/xmlui/handle/123456789/8599
work_keys_str_mv AT moorelornag doeschronicmountainsicknesscmshaveperinatalorigins
AT niermeyersusan doeschronicmountainsicknesscmshaveperinatalorigins
AT vargasenrique doeschronicmountainsicknesscmshaveperinatalorigins
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