Abstract

Aerospace medicine required controlled terrestrial models to investigate influences of altered atmosphere conditions, such as hypoxia, on human health and performance. These models could potentially be expanded to encompass disease conditions or treatment targets regulated through hypoxia or hypercapnia. Hypoxia, a condition in which the body is deprived of adequate oxygen supply, profoundly affects human physiology at multiple levels and contributes to the pathogenesis of various diseases. Experimental exposure to hypoxic conditions has gained recognition as a model for studying diseases such as pulmonary hypertension, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, obstructive sleep apnoea, migraine and kidney disease. This approach may be particularly useful in mechanism-oriented early-stage clinical studies. This review discusses the ability of hypoxia models from space medicine research to mimic or induce these conditions in a controlled laboratory setting as a tool for testing the efficacy and safety of new pharmaceutical interventions.

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