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Surviving Without Oxygen: How Low Can the Human Brain Go?

Authors :
Otto F. Barak
Christopher K. Willie
Damian M. Bailey
Zeljko Dujic
David B. MacLeod
Daniel K DeMasi
Anthony R. Bain
Andrea Andrijanic
Ryan L. Hoiland
Philip N. Ainslie
Tanja Mijacika
Maria Antoinette Santoro
Source :
High altitude medicinebiology. 18(1)
Publication Year :
2016

Abstract

Bailey, Damian M., Christopher K. Willie, Ryan L. Hoiland, Anthony R. Bain, David B. MacLeod, Maria A. Santoro, Daniel K. DeMasi, Andrea Andrijanic, Tanja Mijacika, Otto F. Barak, Zeljko Dujic, and Philip N. Ainslie. Surviving without oxygen: how low can the human brain go? High Alt Med Biol 18:73–79, 2017.—Hypoxic cerebral vasodilation is a highly conserved physiological response coupling cerebral O2 delivery (CDO2) to metabolic demand with increasingly important roles identified for the red blood cell (sensor) and nitric oxide (effector). In the current article, we reexamine previously published cerebral blood flow (CBF) and arterial blood gas data obtained in freedivers and mountaineers, extreme athletes in whom the lowest arterial partial pressures of O2 (19–23 mmHg) and greatest extremes of carbon dioxide (16–61 mmHg) were recorded during (acute) maximal static dry apnea or (chronic) exposure to terrestrial high altitude. Data highlight compensatory increases in CBF (+96% in freedivers to +2...

Details

ISSN :
15578682
Volume :
18
Issue :
1
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
High altitude medicinebiology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....3a6157c53c581a8ee743c8f9a3e01d1e