藏族大学生初访低海拔地区的水土不服调查分析

Q3 Medicine
Weihua Zhang, Kezhen Han, Li Shao, Chao Yang, Kexin Zhao, Zhao Jiang
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引用次数: 0

摘要

目的:探讨长期居住在西藏的藏族大学生首次到低海拔地区时生理指标变化与海拔、年龄、性别的相关性,为长期居住在高海拔地区的藏族大学生首次到低海拔地区时提供健康指导。方法:采用整群随机抽样的方法,选取西藏民族大学健康的藏族大学生170名(男85名,女85名)。参与者没有任何呼吸系统、循环系统或神经系统疾病,也没有此类疾病的家族史。通过问卷调查和生理指标监测数据,分析这些藏族大学生在到达低海拔地区后的第一个月内出现的水土流失症状的发生率和持续时间。此外,采用R编程语言和SPSS软件分析了受试者到达低海拔地区前后血压、心率、体重的变化与受试者的年龄、性别、长期居住在西藏的海拔高度的相关性。结果:统计分析表明,藏族大学生在首次到低海拔地区的第一周内出现了适应气候变化的症状,主要表现为头晕、疲劳和嗜睡。女生的发病率为41.9%,男生为22.5%。此外,在到达低海拔地区后,参与者的血压和心率都经历了最初的下降,然后恢复。与到达低海拔地区时的体重相比,他们的体重平均增加了1.5公斤。在西藏长期居住的不同性别、不同海拔的藏族学生到达低海拔地区后,其血压、心率和体重均存在显著差异。结论:藏族大学生到达低海拔地区后,各项生理指标变化明显,收缩压、体重等与性别、海拔等参数有较强的相关性。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
[Investigation and Analysis of Deacclimatization in Tibetan College Students Upon First Visit to Low-Altitude Regions].

Objective: To investigate the correlation between changes in physiological indicators and altitude, age, and sex among ethnic Tibetan college students living in Xizang on long-term basis upon their first ever visit to a low-altitude region, thereby providing health guidance for long-term residents of high-altitude regions when they visit low-altitude environments for the first time.

Methods: A cluster random sampling method was used to select 170 healthy first-year college students of Tibetan ethnicity (85 males and 85 females), from Xizang Minzu University. The participants did not have any respiratory, circulatory, or nervous system diseases, nor any family history of such conditions. Based on their responses to questionnaires and the monitoring data of their physiological indicators, an analysis was conducted to assess the incidence and duration of deacclimatization symptoms among these Tibetan college students during the first month after their arrival at a low-altitude region. In addition, the R programming language and the SPSS software were used to analyze the correlation between changes in blood pressure, heart rate, and body weight and the participants' age, sex, and the altitude of their long-term residence in Xizang before and after their arrival at a low-altitude region.

Results: Statistical analysis revealed that Tibetan college students experienced deacclimatization symptoms within the first week of their first ever visit to a low-altitude region, primarily characterized by dizziness, fatigue, and drowsiness. The incidence was 41.9% among female students and 22.5% among male students. Furthermore, after arriving at low-altitude region, the participants experience an initial decrease followed by a recovery in both blood pressure and heart rate. They gained an average of 1.5 kg in body mass compared with their initial measurements upon arrival in a low-altitude region. Significant differences in blood pressure, heart rate, and body mass were observed among Tibetan students of different sexes and altitudes of their long-term residence in Xizang after their arrival in a low-altitude region.

Conclusion: After arriving at a low-altitude region, Tibetan college students exhibit marked changes in physiological indicators, showing strong correlations between systolic blood pressure, body mass, etc., and sex, altitude, and other parameters.

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来源期刊
四川大学学报(医学版)
四川大学学报(医学版) Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology-Molecular Biology
CiteScore
0.70
自引率
0.00%
发文量
8695
期刊介绍: "Journal of Sichuan University (Medical Edition)" is a comprehensive medical academic journal sponsored by Sichuan University, a higher education institution directly under the Ministry of Education of the People's Republic of China. It was founded in 1959 and was originally named "Journal of Sichuan Medical College". In 1986, it was renamed "Journal of West China University of Medical Sciences". In 2003, it was renamed "Journal of Sichuan University (Medical Edition)" (bimonthly). "Journal of Sichuan University (Medical Edition)" is a Chinese core journal and a Chinese authoritative academic journal (RCCSE). It is included in the retrieval systems such as China Science and Technology Papers and Citation Database (CSTPCD), China Science Citation Database (CSCD) (core version), Peking University Library's "Overview of Chinese Core Journals", the U.S. "Index Medica" (IM/Medline), the U.S. "PubMed Central" (PMC), the U.S. "Biological Abstracts" (BA), the U.S. "Chemical Abstracts" (CA), the U.S. EBSCO, the Netherlands "Abstracts and Citation Database" (Scopus), the Japan Science and Technology Agency Database (JST), the Russian "Abstract Magazine", the Chinese Biomedical Literature CD-ROM Database (CBMdisc), the Chinese Biomedical Periodical Literature Database (CMCC), the China Academic Journal Network Full-text Database (CNKI), the Chinese Academic Journal (CD-ROM Edition), and the Wanfang Data-Digital Journal Group.
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