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      Adaptation to Moderate Altitude Hypoxemia: The Example of the Valley of Mexico

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          Abstract

          ABSTRACT A large world population resides at moderate altitude. In the Valley of Mexico (2,240 m above sea level), its inhabitants, breathe approximately 29% more on average and have 10% increased hemoglobin concentrations compared to sea level residents, among other differences. These compensations reduce but not eliminate the impact of altitude hypoxemia. The objective of the manuscript is to review and describe the information available on health and disease at moderate altitudes, mainly with data in Spanish language from Latin-American countries. Young adults in Mexico City have an SaO2 between 92% and 94% versus 97% at sea level, frequently decreasing below 90% during sleep and intense exercise. It is likely that among the population living at this altitude, lung growth, and development during pregnancy and infancy are enhanced, and that after residing for several tens of thousands of years, more important adaptations in oxygen transport and utilization have developed, but we are not certain about it. For patients with respiratory diseases, residing at moderate altitudes implies increased hypoxemia and clinical deterioration, unless supplementary oxygen is prescribed or patients move to sea level. Hyperventilation increases exposure of residents to air pollutants compared to those living in cities with similar concentrations of pollutants, although at sea level. Humans evolved at sea level and lack the best-known adaptations to reside at moderate or high altitudes. Residents of moderate altitudes breathe deeply the city´s air with all its pollutants, and more often require supplementary oxygen.

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          Most cited references50

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          Hypsographic demography: The distribution of human population by altitude

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            Evolutionary history of Tibetans inferred from whole-genome sequencing

            The indigenous people of the Tibetan Plateau have been the subject of much recent interest because of their unique genetic adaptations to high altitude. Recent studies have demonstrated that the Tibetan EPAS1 haplotype is involved in high altitude-adaptation and originated in an archaic Denisovan-related population. We sequenced the whole-genomes of 27 Tibetans and conducted analyses to infer a detailed history of demography and natural selection of this population. We detected evidence of population structure between the ancestral Han and Tibetan subpopulations as early as 44 to 58 thousand years ago, but with high rates of gene flow until approximately 9 thousand years ago. The CMS test ranked EPAS1 and EGLN1 as the top two positive selection candidates, and in addition identified PTGIS, VDR, and KCTD12 as new candidate genes. The advantageous Tibetan EPAS1 haplotype shared many variants with the Denisovan genome, with an ancient gene tree divergence between the Tibetan and Denisovan haplotypes of about 1 million years ago. With the exception of EPAS1, we observed no evidence of positive selection on Denisovan-like haplotypes.
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              The physiologic basis of high-altitude diseases.

              , Robert West, (2004)
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                ric
                Revista de investigación clínica
                Rev. invest. clín.
                Instituto Nacional de Ciencias Médicas y Nutrición Salvador Zubirán (Ciudad de México, Ciudad de México, Mexico )
                0034-8376
                2564-8896
                February 2022
                : 74
                : 1
                : 4-15
                Affiliations
                [1] Mexico City orgnameInstituto Nacional de Enfermedades Respiratorias Ismael Cosío Villegas orgdiv1Department of Research on Smoking and COPD Mexico
                Article
                S0034-83762022000100004 S0034-8376(22)07400100004
                10.24875/ric.21000159
                34495023
                59ca164c-4b5a-44d4-b9bf-36eac07b101c

                This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License.

                History
                : 22 March 2021
                : 28 July 2021
                Page count
                Figures: 0, Tables: 0, Equations: 0, References: 50, Pages: 12
                Product

                SciELO Mexico

                Categories
                In-depth review

                Hypoxemia,Moderate altitude,Valley of Mexico,Adaptation,Acclimatization

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