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46 results on '"Altitude Sickness ethnology"'

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1. Establishment of a reference interval for total carbon dioxide using indirect methods in Chinese populations living in high-altitude areas: A retrospective real-world analysis.

2. Chromatin accessibility landscape and regulatory network of high-altitude hypoxia adaptation.

3. Case studies in physiology: Nocturnal cardiorespiratory adaptive differences between an Italian trekker and a Nepali guide.

4. EPAS1 and VEGFA gene variants are related to the symptoms of acute mountain sickness in Chinese Han population: a cross-sectional study.

5. LINE-1 and EPAS1 DNA methylation associations with high-altitude exposure.

6. High altitude and pre-eclampsia: Adaptation or protection.

7. Plasma Proteomics of Ladakhi Natives Reveal Functional Regulation Between Renin-Angiotensin System and eNOS-cGMP Pathway.

8. Angiotensin II receptor 1 gene variants are associated with high-altitude pulmonary edema risk.

9. Telomere length-related gene ACYP2 polymorphism is associated with the risk of HAPE in Chinese Han population.

10. Interaction of CARD14, SENP1 and VEGFA polymorphisms on susceptibility to high altitude polycythemia in the Han Chinese population at the Qinghai-Tibetan Plateau.

13. HIF2A Variants Were Associated with Different Levels of High-Altitude Hypoxia among Native Tibetans.

14. Factors associated with acute mountain sickness in young Chinese men on entering highland areas.

15. The genetic basis of chronic mountain sickness.

16. [Genome-wide association study of high-altitude pulmonary edema in Han Chinese].

17. Polymorphisms of the tissue inhibitor of metalloproteinase 3 gene are associated with resistance to high-altitude pulmonary edema (HAPE) in a Japanese population: a case control study using polymorphic microsatellite markers.

18. Hypoxia-related altitude illnesses.

19. Polymorphisms of angiotensin converting enzyme and nitric oxide synthase 3 genes as risk factors of high-altitude pulmonary edema: a case-control study and meta-analysis.

20. Management of high altitude pulmonary edema in the Himalaya: a review of 56 cases presenting at Pheriche medical aid post (4240 m).

21. High-altitude medicine.

22. High altitude cerebral oedema during adventure training on Mount Kenya.

23. EPAS1 and EGLN1 associations with high altitude sickness in Han and Tibetan Chinese at the Qinghai-Tibetan Plateau.

24. Rare mitochondrial DNA polymorphisms are associated with high altitude pulmonary edema (HAPE) susceptibility in Han Chinese.

25. [Clinical characteristics and changes in blood electrolyte and renal function of neonates with polycythemia at high altitude].

26. MtDNA haplogroups M7 and B in southwestern Han Chinese at risk for acute mountain sickness.

27. [Adaptation to high altitudes: on which genes was selective pressure exercised?].

28. Prevalence of dry eye disease in Mongolians at high altitude in China: the Henan eye study.

29. Circulatory adaptation to long-term high altitude exposure in Aymaras and Caucasians.

30. Strong association between polycythemia and glucose intolerance in elderly high-altitude dwellers in Asia.

31. Comprehensive geriatric assessment of elderly highlanders in Qinghai, China II: the association of polycythemia with lifestyle-related diseases among the three ethnicities.

32. Polymorphisms of human vascular endothelial growth factor gene in high-altitude pulmonary oedema susceptible subjects.

33. Prevalence of acute mountain sickness among Finnish trekkers on Mount Kilimanjaro, Tanzania: an observational study.

34. Symptoms of acute mountain sickness in Sherpas exposed to extremely high altitude.

35. [The clinical characteristics of acute severe high-altitude diseases in indigenous Tibetans].

36. High altitude adaptation in Tibetans.

37. Cerebral vasodilatation to exogenous NO is a measure of fitness for life at altitude.

38. Chronic mountain sickness, optimal hemoglobin, and heart disease.

39. Respiratory control in residents at high altitude: physiology and pathophysiology.

40. Chronic mountain sickness on the Qinghai-Tibetan plateau.

42. Are Himalayan Sherpas better protected against brain damage associated with extreme altitude climbs?

43. [Prevalence of disorders of cardiac rhythm and conduction among autochthonous Mongolian population living in the mid-altitude regions].

45. [Prevalence and natural course of chronic high-altitude cor pulmonale].

46. [Incidence of chronic high-altitude cor pulmonale in the Mongolian People's Republic].

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