Journal
HIGH ALTITUDE MEDICINE & BIOLOGY
Volume 12, Issue 1, Pages 65-69Publisher
MARY ANN LIEBERT, INC
DOI: 10.1089/ham.2010.1033
Keywords
spirometry; lung function; intermittent hypoxia; high altitude; mining
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Vinnikov, Denis, Nurlan Brimkulov, and Rupert Redding-Jones. Four-year prospective study of lung function in workers in a high altitude (4000 m) mine. High Alt. Med. Biol. 12:65-69, 2011.-The aim of this study was to determine if work at high altitude is associated with accelerated lung function decline and if smoking could further accelerate this decline. Subjects working at high altitude (3800 to 4500 m) in a gold mine on shift-rotation basis were included, and 7320 spirometry reports were obtained throughout a 4-yr observation period (20052009). Out of 3368 selected reports with acceptable quality, for 842 patients aged 38.9 +/- 8.6 yr we analyzed annual decline in vital capacity (VC), forced vital capacity (FVC), and forced expiratory volume during the first second (FEV1). VC was reduced by 46.5 mL, FVC by 67.8 mL, and FEV1 by 74.5 mL a year, greater than in historical controls. In those having initial FEV1/FVC below 70%, yearly VC decline was 59.4 mL, FEV1 -58.6 mL. In long-term workers with no initial obstruction, FEV1 declined slower (67.2 vs. 101.3 mL/yr (p < 0.001); but VC and FVC decline did not differ. Work at high altitude for years may be a factor that accelerates lung function decline, and the rate of decline along with confounding factors should be the subject of future studies.
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