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Patients with pulmonary vascular disease often reveal nocturnal hypoxemia and sleep apnea. We investigated whether exposure to high altitude worsens those conditions. In a randomized controlled crossover trial, stable patients with pulmonary arterial hypertension or chronic thromboembolic pulmonary hypertension without resting hypoxemia (arterial oxygen pressure, >8 kPa at low altitude) underwent respiratory polygraphy at 470 meters and during an overnight stay at 2,500 meters. Patients with severe hypoxemia (oxygen saturation as measured by pulse oximetry [Sp], <80% for >30 min) at 2,500 meters received supplemental oxygen therapy (SOT) according to safety criteria. The main outcomes were the number of patients who did not require SOT, the effect of high altitude on nocturnal Sp, oxygen desaturation index (ΔSp, ⩾3%), apnea-hypopnea index, and the effect of SOT. Of 27 patients (44% women; 20/7 pulmonary arterial hypertension/chronic thromboembolic pulmonary hypertension; mean ± standard deviation age, 62 ± 14 y), 10 (37%) required SOT during the course of the night ( = 0.008 vs. low altitude). At 2,500 meters versus 470 meters, mean nocturnal Sp on ambient air decreased from 91 ± 2% to 83 ± 4% (mean change [95% confidence interval], -8% [-9 to -6]; < 0.001), time with Sp <90% increased from 29 ± 27% to 92 ± 15% (+63% [30 to 92]; < 0.001), and the oxygen desaturation index increased from 17 ± 14 events/h to 42 ± 26 events/h (+24.8 events/h [12.8 to 36.5]; < 0.001), but the apnea-hypopnea index remained unchanged. With SOT, Sp was restored to values at 470 meters. In stable, low-risk patients with pulmonary vascular disease, altitude worsened nocturnal hypoxemia but not sleep-disordered breathing. The majority of patients did not require SOT according to predefined safety criteria. When needed, SOT restored low-altitude indices of oxygenation. Clinical trial registered with www.clinicaltrials.gov (NCT05089487).
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Tribol Lett
July 2025
Department of Mechanical Engineering and Materials Science, University of Pittsburgh, 3700 O'Hara St., Pittsburgh, PA 15261 USA.
Unlabelled: Surface performance is critically influenced by topography in virtually all real-world applications. The current standard practice is to describe topography using one of a few industry-standard parameters. The most commonly reported number is a, the average absolute deviation of the height from the mean line (at some, not necessarily known or specified, lateral length scale).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSci Total Environ
September 2025
Smart Emissions Sensing Technologies (SENST) Lab, Department of Geography, University of Calgary, 2500 University Drive NW, Calgary T2N 1N4, AB, Canada.
Arch Pediatr
July 2025
Pediatric Department, Centre Hospitalier Metropole Savoie, Chambéry, France; Ifremmont - Institut de Recherche et de Formation en Médecine de Montagne, Chamonix, France. Electronic address:
Objective: To develop recommendations for mountain travel and altitude acclimation for children under 3 years old by convening a committee of experts.
Methods: Using the DELPHI method, we collected proposals via email from professionals specializing in altitude and related pathologies. Experts were asked about the maximum suggested altitude and specific recommendations.
Medwave
May 2025
Department of Physical Therapy, Faculty of Medicine, University of Chile, Santiago, Chile.
Introduction: The five repetitions sit-to-stand test is commonly used to evaluate physical function, mainly to determine the risk of falls, and is also included as a component in other evaluations, such as the Short Physical Performance Battery. However, reference values are currently unavailable for populations living at high altitudes. This study aimed to establish normative values for the five repetitions sit-to-stand test in the population living 2500 meters above sea level.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAn ongoing major challenge faced in portions of the western United States is to stop the decline of aquifers that are hydraulically connected to rivers. As these aquifers decline, streamflow is depleted, resulting in impacts to agriculture, environmental flows, and hydropower production. In 2014, the Idaho Water Resource Board initiated an aquifer recharge program, and in 2015 a historic settlement agreement (hereafter referred to as the Settlement Agreement) was signed by surface water users with senior water rights and groundwater pumpers with junior water rights to stop the decline of the eastern Snake Plain Aquifer (ESPA) in southern Idaho (SWC-IGWA 2015).
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