Pulmonary nitric oxide in mountain dwellers (original) (raw)
- Brief Communication
- Published: 22 November 2001
- Daniel Laskowski2,
- Kingman P. Strohl3,
- Rudy Soria4,
- Mercedes Villena4,
- Enrique Vargas4,
- Ana Maria Alarcon4,
- Cristina Gonzales4 &
- …
- Serpil C. Erzurum2
Nature volume 414, pages 411–412 (2001)Cite this article
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Populations living at high altitudes have an adaptive mechanism to offset hypoxia.
Abstract
Nitric oxide is synthesized in the lungs to help regulate blood flow, and its levels have been found to drop in species native to low altitudes, including humans, upon acute exposure to reduced oxygen concentration1,2,3. But we show here that exhalation of nitric oxide by chronically hypoxic populations of Tibetans living at 4,200 m and of Bolivian Aymara at 3,900 m is unexpectedly increased compared with a low-altitude reference sample from the United States. This consistent response in two far-removed, high-altitude locales indicates that increasing the concentration of nitric oxide in the lungs may represent a means of offsetting hypoxia.
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Figure 1
C. BEALL AND M. GOLDSTEIN
Figure 2: A Tibetan population living at 4,200 m, a Bolivian Aymara population at 3,900 m and a low-altitude population in the United States differ significantly in their mean concentrations of exhaled nitric oxide (NO; ANOVA, F = 77.9, d.f. = 2, P < 0.05); no sex or age differences are evident in the results.
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Authors and Affiliations
- Department of Anthropology, Case Western Reserve University, Cleveland, 44106, Ohio, USA
Cynthia M Beall - Departments of Pulmonary and Critical Care Medicine, and Cancer Biology, Cleveland Clinic Foundation, Cleveland, 44195, Ohio, USA
Daniel Laskowski & Serpil C. Erzurum - Department of Medicine, Louis Stokes VA Medical Center, Case Western Reserve University, Cleveland, 44106, Ohio, USA
Kingman P. Strohl - Departamento Respiratorio, Instituto Boliviano de Biologia de Altura, La Paz, Bolivia
Rudy Soria, Mercedes Villena, Enrique Vargas, Ana Maria Alarcon & Cristina Gonzales
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- Cynthia M Beall
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Correspondence toCynthia M Beall.
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Supplementary information
Table 1. Healthy, non-smoking high-altitude native samples.
Bolivian Aymara, altitude 3900m
Tibetans, altitude 4200m
All values are mean ± SEM. The 13 males and 20 females in the low-altitude U.S. sample had average ages of 32 ± 2 and 31 ± 2 years, respectively. * p<0.05, 2-tailed t-test of Tibetan-Aymara differences in mean value of age-sex group.
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Beall, C., Laskowski, D., Strohl, K. et al. Pulmonary nitric oxide in mountain dwellers.Nature 414, 411–412 (2001). https://doi.org/10.1038/35106641
- Issue Date: 22 November 2001
- DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/35106641