Implications of a patent foramen ovale for environmental physiology and pathophysiology: do we know the 'hole' story?
- PMID: 35043424
- DOI: 10.1113/JP281108
Implications of a patent foramen ovale for environmental physiology and pathophysiology: do we know the 'hole' story?
Abstract
The foramen ovale is an essential component of the fetal circulation contributing to oxygenation and carbon dioxide elimination that remains patent under certain circumstances in ∼30% of the healthy adult population, without major negative sequelae in most. Adults with a patent foramen ovale (PFO) have a greater tendency to develop symptoms of acute mountain sickness and high-altitude pulmonary oedema upon ascent to high altitude, and PFO presence is associated with worse cardiopulmonary function in chronic mountain sickness. This increase in altitude illness prevalence may be related to dysregulated cerebral blood flow associated with altered respiratory chemoreflex sensitivity; however, the mechanisms remain to be elucidated. Interestingly, men with a PFO appear to have a shift in thermoregulatory control to higher internal temperatures, both at rest and during exercise, and they have blunted thermal hyperpnoea. The teleological 'reason' for this thermoregulatory shift is unclear, but the shift of ∼0.5°C in core body temperature does not appear to be sufficient to have any significant negative consequences in terms of risk of heat illness. Further work in this area is needed, particularly in women, to evaluate mechanisms of heat storage and dissipation in these individuals compared to people without a PFO. Consequences of a PFO in SCUBA divers include a greater incidence of unprovoked decompression sickness, but whether PFO is beneficial or detrimental to breath hold diving remains unexplored. Whether PFO presence will explain interindividual variability in responses to, and consequences from, other environmental stressors such as spaceflight remain entirely unknown.
Keywords: PFO; cardiovascular; high altitude; hypoxia; shunt; thermoregulation.
© 2022 The Authors. The Journal of Physiology © 2022 The Physiological Society.
References
-
- Ainslie PN, Lucas SJE & Burgess KR (2013). Breathing and sleep at high altitude. Respir Physiol Neurobiol 188, 233-256.
-
- Ainslie PN & Subudhi AW (2014). Cerebral blood flow at high altitude. High Alt Med Biol 15, 133-140.
-
- Allemann Y, Hutter D, Lipp E, Sartori C, Duplain H, Egli M, Cook S, Scherrer U & Seiler C (2006). Patent foramen ovale and high-altitude pulmonary edema. J Am Med Assoc 296, 2954-2958.
-
- Barnes JN & Charkoudian N (2021). Integrative cardiovascular control in women: regulation of blood pressure, body temperature, and cerebrovascular responsiveness. FASEB J 35, e21143.
-
- Berssenbrugge A, Dempsey J, Iber C, Skatrud J & Wilson P (1983). Mechanisms of hypoxia-induced periodic breathing during sleep in humans. J Physiol 343, 507-526.
Publication types
MeSH terms
LinkOut - more resources
Full Text Sources
Medical