4.5 Article

Exercise intensity typical of mountain climbing does not exacerbate acute mountain sickness in normobaric hypoxia

期刊

JOURNAL OF APPLIED PHYSIOLOGY
卷 113, 期 7, 页码 1068-1074

出版社

AMER PHYSIOLOGICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1152/japplphysiol.00329.2012

关键词

high altitude; AMS; oxygen saturation; near-infrared spectroscopy; hypoxemia

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Schommer K, Hammer M, Hotz L, Menold E, Bartsch P, Berger MM. Exercise intensity typical of mountain climbing does not exacerbate acute mountain sickness in normobaric hypoxia. J Appl Physiol 113: 1068-1074, 2012. First published August 2, 2012; doi:10.1152/japplphysiol.00329.2012.-Physical exertion is thought to exacerbate acute mountain sickness (AMS). In this prospective, randomized, crossover trial, we investigated whether moderate exercise worsens AMS in normobaric hypoxia (12% oxygen, equivalent to 4,500 m). Sixteen subjects were exposed to altitude twice: once with exercise [3 x 45 min within the first 4 h on a bicycle ergometer at 50% of their altitude-specific maximal workload (maximal oxygen uptake)], and once without. AMS was evaluated by the Lake Louise score and the AMS-C score of the Environmental Symptom Questionnaire. There was no significant difference in AMS between the exposures with and without exercise, neither after 5, 8, nor 18 h (incidence: 64 and 43%; LLS: 6.5 +/- 0.7 and 5.1 +/- 0.8; AMS-C score: 1.2 +/- 0.3 and 1.1 +/- 0.3 for exercise vs. rest at 18 h; all P > 0.05). Exercise decreased capillary PO2 (from 36 +/- 1 Torr at rest to 31 +/- 1 Torr), capillary arterial oxygen saturation (from 72% at rest to 67 +/- 2%), and cerebral oxygen saturation (from 49 +/- 2% at rest to 42 +/- 1%, as assessed by near-infrared spectroscopy; P < 0.05), and increased ventilation (capillary PCO2 27 +/- 1 Torr; P < 0.05). After exercise, the increase in ventilation persisted for several hours and was associated with similar levels of capillary and cerebral oxygenation at the exercise and rest day. We conclude that moderate exercise at similar to 50% maximal oxygen uptake does not increase AMS in normobaric hypoxia. These data do not exclude that considerably higher exercise intensities exacerbate AMS.

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