Current concept of chronic mountain sickness: pulmonary hypertension–related high-altitude heart disease

High-altitude heart disease, a form of chronic mountain sickness, has been well established in both Tibet and Qinghai provinces of China, although little is known regarding this syndrome in other countries, particularly in the West. This review presents a general overview of high-altitude heart dise...

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Veröffentlicht in:Wilderness & environmental medicine 2001, Vol.12 (3), p.190-194
Hauptverfasser: Ge, Ri-Li, Helun, Gaowa
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description High-altitude heart disease, a form of chronic mountain sickness, has been well established in both Tibet and Qinghai provinces of China, although little is known regarding this syndrome in other countries, particularly in the West. This review presents a general overview of high-altitude heart disease in China and briefly summarizes the existing data with regard to the prevalence, clinical features, and pathophysiology of the illness. The definition of high-altitude heart disease is right ventricular enlargement that develops primarily (by high-altitude exposure) to pulmonary hypertension without excessive polycythemia. The prevalence is higher in children than adults and in men than women, but is lower in both sexes of Tibetan high-altitude residents compared with acclimatized newcomers, such as Han Chinese. Clinical symptoms consist of headache, dyspnea, cough, irritability, and sleeplessness. Physical findings include a marked cyanosis, rapid heart and respiratory rates, edema of the face, liver enlargement, and rales. Most patients have complete recovery on descent to a lower altitude, but symptoms recur with a return to high altitude. Right ventricular enlargement, pulmonary hypertension, and remodeling of pulmonary arterioles are hallmarks of high-altitude heart disease. It is hoped that this information will assist in understanding this type of chronic mountain sickness, facilitate international exchange of data, and stimulate further research into this poorly understood condition.
doi_str_mv 10.1580/1080-6032(2001)012[0190:CCOCMS]2.0.CO;2
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subjects altitude
Altitude Sickness - epidemiology
Altitude Sickness - etiology
Altitude Sickness - physiopathology
China - epidemiology
Chronic Disease
Heart Failure
Humans
Hypertension, Pulmonary
hypoxemia
pulmonary hypertension
Syndrome
vascular remodeling
title Current concept of chronic mountain sickness: pulmonary hypertension–related high-altitude heart disease
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