乙酰唑胺
缺氧(环境)
碳酸酐酶抑制剂
缺氧通气反应
医学
碳酸酐酶
内科学
药理学
心脏病学
物理疗法
化学
呼吸系统
氧气
生物化学
酶
有机化学
作者
Connor J. Doherty,Jou‐Chung Chang,Benjamin P. Thompson,Erik R. Swenson,Glen E. Foster,Paolo B. Dominelli
出处
期刊:High Altitude Medicine & Biology
[Mary Ann Liebert]
日期:2023-02-21
卷期号:24 (1): 7-18
被引量:5
标识
DOI:10.1089/ham.2022.0134
摘要
Doherty, Connor J., Jou-Chung Chang, Benjamin P. Thompson, Erik R. Swenson, Glen E. Foster, and Paolo B. Dominelli. The impact of acetazolamide and methazolamide on exercise performance in normoxia and hypoxia. High Alt Med Biol. 24:7–18, 2023.—Carbonic anhydrase (CA) inhibitors are commonly prescribed for acute mountain sickness (AMS). In this review, we sought to examine how two CA inhibitors, acetazolamide (AZ) and methazolamide (MZ), affect exercise performance in normoxia and hypoxia. First, we briefly describe the role of CA inhibition in facilitating the increase in ventilation and arterial oxygenation in preventing and treating AMS. Next, we detail how AZ affects exercise performance in normoxia and hypoxia and this is followed by a discussion on MZ. We emphasize that the overarching focus of the review is how the two drugs potentially affect exercise performance, rather than their ability to prevent/treat AMS per se, their interrelationship will be discussed. Overall, we suggest that AZ hinders exercise performance in normoxia, but may be beneficial in hypoxia. Based upon head-to-head studies of AZ and MZ in humans on diaphragmatic and locomotor strength in normoxia, MZ may be a better CA inhibitor when exercise performance is crucial at high altitude.
科研通智能强力驱动
Strongly Powered by AbleSci AI