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Judi Lynn

(163,195 posts)
Tue Mar 18, 2025, 11:36 AM Mar 18

An Unlikely Organ Helps to Explain Sherpas' Aptitude for Altitude

March 17, 2025

2 min read

New work reveals a surprising hero in combating altitude sickness

By Sasha Warren edited by Sarah Lewin Frasier



Solovyova/iStock/Getty Images Plus

For most mountaineers, some level of altitude sickness is inevitable. But Indigenous highlanders living on the Tibetan Plateau, known as Sherpas, have inhabited the high Himalaya long enough to have an evolutionary edge at tolerating elevation compared with lowlanders born and raised farther down. For a study in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences USA, researchers compared Sherpa and lowlander blood samples during a Himalayan trek to investigate the Sherpas’ aptitude for altitude—and they found a crucial clue in the kidney.

The thinner atmosphere up high can lead to hypoxia, a dangerous lack of oxygen. This condition, which often occurs during medical events such as heart failure, can also cause acute altitude sickness; mountaineers can become nauseated, dizzy and disoriented, in severe cases developing deadly fluid buildup in the lungs and brain. Studying the physical responses of altitude-adapted people reveals how their bodies keep them healthy during hypoxia.

Hypoxic people breathe faster to bring more oxygen into their lungs. But extra breathing also empties the lungs of more carbon dioxide than usual, which in turn reduces the production of carbonic acid in the blood. And even tiny changes in acidity risk damaging the proteins and enzymes that keep our cells functioning. Once blood acidity shifts, “the only thing that can fix it is the kidneys,” says study co-author Trevor Day, a physiologist at Mount Royal University in Alberta.

To examine highlanders’ blood acidity at altitude, Day and his colleagues recruited 14 Sherpas and 15 lowlanders from among university students in Kathmandu, Nepal, and ran initial blood tests at 4,200 feet. Next came a nine-day journey to 14,000 feet to take another blood sample. The lowlanders’ blood became more alkaline as they ascended, but Sherpas’ blood acidity didn’t change; their kidneys’ filtering action balanced the alkaline and acidic ions.

More:
https://www.scientificamerican.com/article/an-unlikely-organ-helps-to-explain-sherpas-aptitude-for-altitude/

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An Unlikely Organ Helps to Explain Sherpas' Aptitude for Altitude (Original Post) Judi Lynn Mar 18 OP
I love stories about medical oddities like this! BobTheSubgenius Mar 18 #1

BobTheSubgenius

(11,945 posts)
1. I love stories about medical oddities like this!
Tue Mar 18, 2025, 12:19 PM
Mar 18

Thank you for posting it!

I have always been fascinated by the apparent total lack of anxiety over height that the Mohawk people seem to have. I can't imagine the evolutionary advantage it provides.

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