Do Lung Disease Patients Need Supplemental Oxygen at High Altitude?

被引:10
作者
Luks, Andrew M. [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Washington, Harborview Med Ctr, Div Pulm & Crit Care Med, Seattle, WA 98104 USA
关键词
high altitude; hypoxemia; supplemental oxygen; chronic obstructive pulmonary disease; restrictive lung disease; cystic fibrosis; OBSTRUCTIVE PULMONARY-DISEASE; CYSTIC-FIBROSIS PATIENTS; ACUTE MOUNTAIN-SICKNESS; AIR-TRAVEL; IN-FLIGHT; COMMERCIAL FLIGHT; SIMULATION TEST; HYPOXIA; HYPOXEMIA; PASSENGERS;
D O I
10.1089/ham.2009.1051
中图分类号
Q6 [生物物理学];
学科分类号
071011 ;
摘要
Luks, Andrew M. Do lung patients need supplemental oxygen at high altitude? High Alt. Med. Biol. 10:321-327, 2009.-As medical care and the quality of life for patients with lung disease improve, many of these individuals may engage in various forms of travel, including, possibly, travel to high altitude. Because the hypobaric hypoxia at high altitude may cause severe hypoxemia or impaired exercise tolerance in these patients, clinicians may be asked to assess whether they should use supplemental oxygen during their planned sojourn. This review considers this question in greater detail. After considering how the issue is approached in commercial airplane flight, we consider changes in oxygenation in lung disease patients in ambient hypoxia, the complications associated with such changes, tools for predicting the degree of hypoxemia at high altitude and important logistical issues associated with traveling with supplemental oxygen. The review concludes by providing tentative recommendations for assessing which patients should travel with supplemental oxygen. Patients already on supplemental oxygen at baseline should increase their flow rates at high altitude; patients with sufficiently severe disease who are not on such therapy should undergo pretravel assessment to determine the likely degree of hypoxemia at high altitude, with hypoxia altitude simulation testing being the preferred modality for this assessment. Those patients who develop symptomatic hypoxemia during such testing should travel with supplemental oxygen; those who remain asymptomatic or maintain adequate oxygenation may travel without oxygen, but they should have plans to monitor symptoms and oxygen saturation following arrival and arrange for oxygen therapy if necessary.
引用
收藏
页码:321 / 327
页数:7
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [31] High-altitude headache: the effects of real vs sham oxygen administration
    Benedetti, Fabrizio
    Durando, Jennifer
    Giudetti, Lucia
    Pampallona, Alan
    Vighetti, Sergio
    PAIN, 2015, 156 (11) : 2326 - 2336
  • [32] Cognitive function and mood at high altitude following acclimatization and use of supplemental oxygen and adaptive servoventilation sleep treatments
    Heinrich, Erica C.
    Djokic, Matea A.
    Gilbertson, Dillon
    DeYoung, Pamela N.
    Bosompra, Naa-Oye
    Wu, Lu
    Anza-Ramirez, Cecilia
    Orr, Jeremy E.
    Powell, Frank L.
    Malhotra, Atul
    Simonson, Tatum S.
    PLOS ONE, 2019, 14 (06):
  • [33] An oxygen enrichment device for lowlanders ascending to high altitude
    Guanghao Shen
    Xiaoming Wu
    Chi Tang
    Yili Yan
    Juan Liu
    Wei Guo
    Da Jing
    Tao Lei
    Yue Tian
    Kangning Xie
    Erping Luo
    Jianbao Zhang
    BioMedical Engineering OnLine, 12
  • [34] An oxygen enrichment device for lowlanders ascending to high altitude
    Shen, Guanghao
    Wu, Xiaoming
    Tang, Chi
    Yan, Yili
    Liu, Juan
    Guo, Wei
    Jing, Da
    Lei, Tao
    Tian, Yue
    Xie, Kangning
    Luo, Erping
    Zhang, Jianbao
    BIOMEDICAL ENGINEERING ONLINE, 2013, 12
  • [35] Ventilatory function and oxygen delivery at high altitude in the Himalayas
    Prosperi, Pierpaolo
    Verratti, Vittore
    Taverna, Alberto
    Rua, Riccardo
    Bonan, Sofia
    Rapacchiale, Giorgia
    Bondi, Danilo
    Di Giulio, Camillo
    Lorkowski, Jacek
    Spacone, Antonella
    RESPIRATORY PHYSIOLOGY & NEUROBIOLOGY, 2023, 314
  • [36] Oxygen Titration Strategies in Chronic Neonatal Lung Disease
    Primhak, Robert
    PAEDIATRIC RESPIRATORY REVIEWS, 2010, 11 (03) : 154 - 157
  • [37] High altitude pulmonary edema (HAPE): a borderline disease of the heart and lung
    Fiorenzano, Giuseppe
    Occhi, Giuseppe
    Partesana, Nora
    Dottorini, Maurizio
    MULTIDISCIPLINARY RESPIRATORY MEDICINE, 2008, 3 (02): : 175 - 182
  • [38] Supplemental oxygen effects on ventilation in acclimatized subjects exercising at 5700 m altitude
    Windsor, Jeremy S.
    Rodway, George W.
    AVIATION SPACE AND ENVIRONMENTAL MEDICINE, 2007, 78 (04): : 426 - 429
  • [39] The effectiveness of supplemental oxygen during exercise training in patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease who show severe exercise-induced desaturation: a protocol for a meta-regression analysis and systematic review
    Shohei Kawachi
    Shuhei Yamamoto
    Kenichi Nishie
    Takayoshi Yamaga
    Manaka Shibuya
    Yasunari Sakai
    Keisaku Fujimoto
    Systematic Reviews, 10
  • [40] The effectiveness of supplemental oxygen during exercise training in patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease who show severe exercise-induced desaturation: a protocol for a meta-regression analysis and systematic review
    Kawachi, Shohei
    Yamamoto, Shuhei
    Nishie, Kenichi
    Yamaga, Takayoshi
    Shibuya, Manaka
    Sakai, Yasunari
    Fujimoto, Keisaku
    SYSTEMATIC REVIEWS, 2021, 10 (01)