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1 March 2005 Tibetans at Extreme Altitude
Tianyi Wu, Shupin Li, Michal P. Ward
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Abstract

Between 1960 and 2003, 13 Chinese expeditions successfully reached the summit of Chomolungma (Mt Everest or Sagarmatha). Forty-five of the 80 summiteers were Tibetan highlanders. During these and other high-altitude expeditions in Tibet, a series of medical and physiological investigations were carried out on the Tibetan mountaineers. The results suggest that these individuals are better adapted to high altitude and that, at altitude, they have a greater physical capacity than Han (ethnic Chinese) lowland newcomers. They have higher maximal oxygen uptake, greater ventilation, more brisk hypoxic ventilatory responses, larger lung volumes, greater diffusing capacities, and a better quality of sleep. Tibetans also have a lower incidence of acute mountain sickness and less body weight loss. These differences appear to represent genetic adaptations and are obviously significant for humans at extreme altitude. This paper reviews what is known about the physiologic responses of Tibetans at extreme altitudes.

Tianyi Wu, Shupin Li, and Michal P. Ward "Tibetans at Extreme Altitude," Wilderness & Environmental Medicine 16(1), 47-54, (1 March 2005). https://doi.org/10.1580/PR04-04.1
Published: 1 March 2005
JOURNAL ARTICLE
8 PAGES

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KEYWORDS
altitude
Everest
Tibetan
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