Abstract

Introduction: Exposure to high altitude results in hypobaric hypoxia, leading to physiological changes in the cardiovascular system that may result in dyspnea. Hypoxic simulation testing (HSTs) simulates changes in physiology that occur at a specific altitude. Hypothesis: The use of transthoracic echocardiography (TTE) during HST can detect the raise in right-sided pressures revealing underlying causes of high-altitude dyspnea. Methods: We performed a prospective observational study of consecutive patients with unexplained dyspnea at high altitude who were referred to an aerospace medicine program at a single institution between August 2021 and March 2023. Reduced FiO 2 was administered for 20 minutes to simulate altitude levels specific to patients’ history. TTE images were obtained at baseline and during peak hypoxia to evaluate right ventricular (RV) function, RV systolic pressure, and any possible shunts. Result: The study included 27 patients, with a mean age of 64.7 ±14.4 years and 14 (51.9%) females. No significant abnormalities were seen on baseline TTE and no significant differences in blood pressure and heart rate between baseline and hypoxia simulation were detected. Notably, RV systolic pressure increased at peak hypoxia, while RV systolic function declined as shown by a decrease in S’ wave and TAPSE ( Figure 1 ). Additionally, right to left shunts were present in 19 (70.4%) patients. Of these, four patients (21.1%) had shunts present at baseline with no changes at peak hypoxia, while the severity of shunts increased at peak hypoxia in eight cases (42.1%) and the shunts were only evident during hypoxia in seven patients (36.8%). Conclusion: TTE during HST provides valuable information by revealing the presence of symptomatic, sustained shunts and confirming the decline in RV hemodynamics explaining dyspnea at altitude. Further studies are necessary to establish the optimal clinical role of this physiologic method.

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