Exercise performance of hemodialysis patients during short-term and prolonged exposure to altitude.

1989 
: The work capacity of patients on maintenance hemodialysis is impaired even at normal inspiratory oxygen pressure. A further restriction can be expected when these patients are exposed to hypoxia at altitude, since most of the usual compensatory mechanisms required to adjust to this environment are impaired or even missing. We tested the tolerance of hemodialysis patients to hypoxia and measured work capacity, hematological, and cardiovascular parameters at rest and during incremental bicycle ergometry during 3-hour exposure to altitudes of 2,000 m and 3,000 m, and during 2 weeks of exposure to an altitude of 2,000 m and compared these data with prealtitude values or with data evaluated in a control group, respectively. In control tests the patients reached work loads at exercise termination of about 66% of age and sex-matched healthy controls, the reduction correlated well with the degree of anemia. During short-term altitude exposure to 2,000 m peak work performance remained unchanged in comparison to prealtitude tests, whereas at 3,000 m it was reduced by about 12%. During the 2-week stay at 2,000 m peak work loads increased significantly by 17% accompanied by an increase in peak oxygen uptake (+15%), blood lactate, heart rates (+10 min-1), and systolic blood pressure (+20 mmHg), whereas the diastolic pressure was comparable to prealtitude values. In another group of hemodialysis patients studied at low altitude under similar experimental conditions none of these parameters was changed. Our data show that during acute exposure to altitudes up to 2,000 m maximal work of hemodialysis patients is not reduced, but is restricted at altitudes higher than that.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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