The use of skeletal muscle near infrared spectroscopy and a vascular occlusion test at high altitude

利用骨骼肌近红外光谱和高海拔血管阻塞试验

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Abstract

Microcirculatory function, central to tissue regulation of oxygen flux, may be altered by the chronic hypoxemia experienced at high altitude. We hypothesized that at high altitude, adaptations within skeletal muscle would result in reduced oxygen consumption and reduced microcirculatory responsiveness, detectable by near infrared spectroscopy (NIRS) during a vascular occlusion test (VOT). The VOT comprised 3 min of noninvasive arterial occlusion; thenar eminence tissue oxygenation (Sto2) was measured by NIRS during the VOT at sea level, 4900 m and 5600 m (after 7 and 17 days at altitude, respectively) in 12 healthy volunteers. Data were derived from Sto2 time-curves using specifically designed computer software. Mean (±SD) resting Sto2 was reduced at 4900 m and 5600 m (69.3 (± 8.2)% (p=0.001) and 64.2 (± 6.1)% (p<0.001) respectively) when compared to sea level (84.4 (± 6.0)%. The rate of Sto2 recovery after vascular occlusion (Sto2 upslope) was significantly reduced at 4900 m (2.4 (± 0.4)%/sec) and 5600 m (2.4 (± 0.8)%/sec) compared to sea level (3.7 (± 1.3)%/sec) (p=0.021 and p=0.032, respectively). There was no change from sea level in the rate of desaturation during occlusion (Sto2 downslope) at either altitude. The findings suggest that in resting skeletal muscle of acclimatizing healthy volunteers at high altitude, microvascular reactivity is reduced (Sto2 upslope after a short period of ischemia) but that oxygen consumption remains unchanged (Sto2 downslope).

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