Protective effect of female sex hormones against pulmonary hypertension in Bolivian high altitude natives

There is abundant evidence that female sex hormones have protective effects in the systemic circulation in both animals and humans, but little is known regarding their role in the regulation of the pulmonary circulation. Observations in rats suggest that estrogens may have protective effects against hypoxia-induced pulmonary hypertension. We hypothesized that female sex may confer resistance against pulmonary hypertension in high altitude natives. To test our hypothesis, we performed echocardiographic measurements of the transtricuspid pressure gradient as an index of systolic pulmonaryartery pressure in young healthy Bolivians of Aymara ancestry. We studied 82 females and 99 males between 0 and 35 years of age, who were born and living at high altitude (4000 m). To provide additional information, we also measured arterial oxygen saturation and hemoglobin. The main new findings were two-fold. We found a strong direct relationship between age and systolic pulmonary artery pressure in male (r = 0.48, P< 0.001), but not in female (r = 0.16, P > 0.1) high altitude natives. Moreover, starting at the age of 12 years hemoglobin levels were significantly higher in males than in females, and there was a direct relationship between hemoglobin and pulmonary artery pressure in male (r = 0.51, P < 0.001), but not female (r = 0.14, P > 0.1) subjects. The gender-related differences in pulmonary-artery pressure were not related to differences in arterial oxygen saturation which were comparable in the two groups. These findings provide the first evidence for an age-related increase in pulmonary-artery pressure in young healthy male, but not female high-altitude natives. We speculate that female sex may protect against hypoxia-induced pulmonary hypertension in humans, either via decreased hemoglobin concentration and blood viscosity or by favorable effects of female sex hormones on pulmonary endothelial responsiveness to hypoxia.

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Main Authors: Sartori, Claudio, Allemann, Yves, Salinas Salmón, Carlos E, Turini, Pierre, Rodríguez, Armando, Hutter, Damián, Thalmann, Sébastien, Vargas, Enrique, Villena, Mercedes, Scherrer, Urs
Format: Article biblioteca
Language:English
Published: High Altitude Medicine & Biology 2003-02-19
Subjects:HIPERTENSIÓN PULMONAR, NATIVOS DE GRAN ALTURA,
Online Access:http://repositorio.umsa.bo/xmlui/handle/123456789/9766
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spelling oai:localhost:8080:123456789-97662020-09-21T15:22:06Z Protective effect of female sex hormones against pulmonary hypertension in Bolivian high altitude natives Sartori, Claudio Allemann, Yves Salinas Salmón, Carlos E Turini, Pierre Rodríguez, Armando Hutter, Damián Thalmann, Sébastien Vargas, Enrique Villena, Mercedes Scherrer, Urs HIPERTENSIÓN PULMONAR NATIVOS DE GRAN ALTURA There is abundant evidence that female sex hormones have protective effects in the systemic circulation in both animals and humans, but little is known regarding their role in the regulation of the pulmonary circulation. Observations in rats suggest that estrogens may have protective effects against hypoxia-induced pulmonary hypertension. We hypothesized that female sex may confer resistance against pulmonary hypertension in high altitude natives. To test our hypothesis, we performed echocardiographic measurements of the transtricuspid pressure gradient as an index of systolic pulmonaryartery pressure in young healthy Bolivians of Aymara ancestry. We studied 82 females and 99 males between 0 and 35 years of age, who were born and living at high altitude (4000 m). To provide additional information, we also measured arterial oxygen saturation and hemoglobin. The main new findings were two-fold. We found a strong direct relationship between age and systolic pulmonary artery pressure in male (r = 0.48, P< 0.001), but not in female (r = 0.16, P > 0.1) high altitude natives. Moreover, starting at the age of 12 years hemoglobin levels were significantly higher in males than in females, and there was a direct relationship between hemoglobin and pulmonary artery pressure in male (r = 0.51, P < 0.001), but not female (r = 0.14, P > 0.1) subjects. The gender-related differences in pulmonary-artery pressure were not related to differences in arterial oxygen saturation which were comparable in the two groups. These findings provide the first evidence for an age-related increase in pulmonary-artery pressure in young healthy male, but not female high-altitude natives. We speculate that female sex may protect against hypoxia-induced pulmonary hypertension in humans, either via decreased hemoglobin concentration and blood viscosity or by favorable effects of female sex hormones on pulmonary endothelial responsiveness to hypoxia. 2017-03-01T17:48:11Z 2017-03-01T17:48:11Z 2003-02-19 Article http://repositorio.umsa.bo/xmlui/handle/123456789/9766 en application/pdf High Altitude Medicine & Biology
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 HIPERTENSIÓN PULMONAR
NATIVOS DE GRAN ALTURA
HIPERTENSIÓN PULMONAR
NATIVOS DE GRAN ALTURA
spellingShingle HIPERTENSIÓN PULMONAR
NATIVOS DE GRAN ALTURA
HIPERTENSIÓN PULMONAR
NATIVOS DE GRAN ALTURA
Sartori, Claudio
Allemann, Yves
Salinas Salmón, Carlos E
Turini, Pierre
Rodríguez, Armando
Hutter, Damián
Thalmann, Sébastien
Vargas, Enrique
Villena, Mercedes
Scherrer, Urs
Protective effect of female sex hormones against pulmonary hypertension in Bolivian high altitude natives
description There is abundant evidence that female sex hormones have protective effects in the systemic circulation in both animals and humans, but little is known regarding their role in the regulation of the pulmonary circulation. Observations in rats suggest that estrogens may have protective effects against hypoxia-induced pulmonary hypertension. We hypothesized that female sex may confer resistance against pulmonary hypertension in high altitude natives. To test our hypothesis, we performed echocardiographic measurements of the transtricuspid pressure gradient as an index of systolic pulmonaryartery pressure in young healthy Bolivians of Aymara ancestry. We studied 82 females and 99 males between 0 and 35 years of age, who were born and living at high altitude (4000 m). To provide additional information, we also measured arterial oxygen saturation and hemoglobin. The main new findings were two-fold. We found a strong direct relationship between age and systolic pulmonary artery pressure in male (r = 0.48, P< 0.001), but not in female (r = 0.16, P > 0.1) high altitude natives. Moreover, starting at the age of 12 years hemoglobin levels were significantly higher in males than in females, and there was a direct relationship between hemoglobin and pulmonary artery pressure in male (r = 0.51, P < 0.001), but not female (r = 0.14, P > 0.1) subjects. The gender-related differences in pulmonary-artery pressure were not related to differences in arterial oxygen saturation which were comparable in the two groups. These findings provide the first evidence for an age-related increase in pulmonary-artery pressure in young healthy male, but not female high-altitude natives. We speculate that female sex may protect against hypoxia-induced pulmonary hypertension in humans, either via decreased hemoglobin concentration and blood viscosity or by favorable effects of female sex hormones on pulmonary endothelial responsiveness to hypoxia.
format Article
topic_facet HIPERTENSIÓN PULMONAR
NATIVOS DE GRAN ALTURA
author Sartori, Claudio
Allemann, Yves
Salinas Salmón, Carlos E
Turini, Pierre
Rodríguez, Armando
Hutter, Damián
Thalmann, Sébastien
Vargas, Enrique
Villena, Mercedes
Scherrer, Urs
author_facet Sartori, Claudio
Allemann, Yves
Salinas Salmón, Carlos E
Turini, Pierre
Rodríguez, Armando
Hutter, Damián
Thalmann, Sébastien
Vargas, Enrique
Villena, Mercedes
Scherrer, Urs
author_sort Sartori, Claudio
title Protective effect of female sex hormones against pulmonary hypertension in Bolivian high altitude natives
title_short Protective effect of female sex hormones against pulmonary hypertension in Bolivian high altitude natives
title_full Protective effect of female sex hormones against pulmonary hypertension in Bolivian high altitude natives
title_fullStr Protective effect of female sex hormones against pulmonary hypertension in Bolivian high altitude natives
title_full_unstemmed Protective effect of female sex hormones against pulmonary hypertension in Bolivian high altitude natives
title_sort protective effect of female sex hormones against pulmonary hypertension in bolivian high altitude natives
publisher High Altitude Medicine & Biology
publishDate 2003-02-19
url http://repositorio.umsa.bo/xmlui/handle/123456789/9766
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