| Electrocardiographic Changes During Exercise in Acute Hypoxia and Susceptibility to Severe High-Altitude Illnesses | |
| Article | |
| 关键词: CORONARY-ARTERY-DISEASE; ACUTE EXPOSURE; RISK-FACTORS; ECG-CHANGES; TREKKERS; DEATH; HEART; | |
| DOI : 10.1161/CIRCULATIONAHA.114.013144 | |
| 来源: SCIE | |
【 摘 要 】
Background-The goals of this study were to compare ECG at moderate exercise in normoxia and hypoxia at the same heart rate, to provide evidence of independent predictors of hypoxia-induced ECG changes, and to evaluate ECG risk factors of severe high-altitude illness. Methods and Results-A total of 456 subjects performed a 20-minute hypoxia exercise test with continuous recording of ECG and physiological measurements before a sojourn above 4000 m. Hypoxia did not induce any conduction disorder, arrhythmias, or change in QRS axis. The amplitude of the P wave in V-1 was lower in hypoxia than in normoxia. The amplitudes of the R, S, and T waves and the Sokolow index decreased in hypoxia. Under hypoxia, the amplitude of the ST segment decreased in II and V-6 and increased in V-1, the ST slope rose in V-5 and V-6, and the J point was lower in II, V-5, and V-6. Multivariate regression of hypoxic/normoxic ratios of electrophysiological parameters and clinical characteristics showed a correlation between the decrease in Sokolow index and T-wave amplitude in V-5 with desaturation at exercise. Trained status and low body mass index were associated with a smaller decrease in T-wave amplitude in V-5 and V-6. Comparison of ECG between subjects suffering or not suffering from severe high-altitude illness failed to show any difference. Conclusions-During a hypoxia exercise test, a dose-dependent hypoxia-induced decrease in the amplitude of the P/QRS/T waves was observed. No standard ECG characteristic predicted the risk of developing severe high-altitude illness. Further studies are required to clarify the cause of these electric changes and their potential predictive role in cardiac events.
【 授权许可】
Free