Will Pavia
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A study of nine British children who trekked towards Everest Base Camp could help to save premature babies from blindness and lung damage and provide life-saving information for doctors in intensive care units.
Researchers monitored the effects of high altitude on the group of children aged six to thirteen.
During the trek the children were breathing far less oxygen than they would at sea level, which was as debilitating as a critical illness and similar to the conditions experienced by premature babies. The results of the Smiths Medical Young Everest Study suggest that the children coped better than would be expected with the low levels of oxygen saturation in the blood.
Faced with a premature baby — or a child with chronic breathing difficulties — doctors would normally intervene and administer oxygen. But giving too much oxygen to children can cause them lung damage and in premature babies can lead to blindness.
The nine children who ascended mountain pathways provided data that could be the basis for future tests to establish whether doctors can lower the doses of oxygen administered. It may also pave the way for children with chronic lung diseases to be monitored at home rather than in hospital.
The study suggested that the human body copes with lower oxygen levels by reverting to techniques used in the womb. Monty Mythen, Smiths Medical Professor of Anaesthesia and Critical Care at University College London, who volunteered his own four children for the study, said: “A child in the womb uses less oxygen, about the amount that someone would have at 8,500 m [27,900ft].”
Next week doctors of heart and lung diseases and hypoxia — critically low blood oxygen saturation — will meet with intensive care doctors and doctors who specialise in foetal growth, to discuss whether there is a link between people experiencing high altitudes, foetuses in the womb and diving mammals.
Professor Mythen said: “Younger children may actually be better than people who have gone through puberty. Being closer to the womb, they have more of their adaptive processes still switched on.”
Though the children all coped well with lower levels of oxygen in their blood, some coped far better than others, suggesting that they had a genetic predisposition to adapt to low oxygen levels. The information may help to develop tailored treatments for children in intensive care.
Doctors currently have no way of telling how a patient will react to low levels of oxygen in their bloodstream. Roughly a quarter of people adapt very quickly, 50 per cent adapt more slowly, while a remaining quarter cope very poorly and may die unless they receive adequate support.
Two of the children on the study adapted to high altitude with the proficiency of high mountain climbers, while one of the nine struggled.
Janet Stocks, Professor of Respiratory Physiology at University College London, who led the study, said: “The children all kept diaries recording how they were feeling, and this really didn’t reflect how their bodies were coping. I think it’s fairly clear that there is a genetic determinant.”
Professor Mythen is now planning a more ambitious study, taking 100 British children to the Himalayas in 2011.

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Assumptions can create terrible prejudice: Far from being a junket for the Mythen family, I know for fact that they not only paid for their children to attend some of the trial, but that they also had to tighten their belts as a family when the major breadwinner was away for a quarter of they year conducting research that might benefit others.
In any article, only a small amount of information can be given, so it's frustrating to see so much negative comment when the full extent of the research isn't revealed on the page. Is it possible for The Times to add a website address so readers can look at the results of all the studies conducted on the expedition?
As my own daughter, who, at the age of 9 months, spent nearly 4 months in intensive care with a tumour that impaired her breathing, I'm grateful to research that can bring fresh insights into how some of us cope better than others in extreme situations. Now that she's recovered, she may well want to join the 2011 expedition.
Carmel Allen, London,
So, hundreds of thousands of tax payers money is being embezzeled by Mythen so that she can take herself and her kids on a holiday/ The result, '' A child in the womb uses less oxygen''.
Well we all know that dont we. an unborn child is in an almost vegetable state compared to one shouting screaming and running around.
Goodness me. her findings are as inconclusive as they are wasteful.
Can we name and shame the people who authorized this junket.
mark armstrong, london.UK,
Isn't this study ignoring the results of countless studies on adaptation to low oxygen levels and acute mountain sickness (AMS) in adults? Even the most experienced mountaineers suffer from altitude sickness from time to time - it;s just "how you are on the day". They can be fine on one trip, and flattened by AMS on others. Genetic predisposition seems irrelevant in these circumstances. If this is the best conclusion they can come up with, which is vague and cannot be tested, this study has been a huge waste of money, but at least a good experience for the kids. (Although I would never let a scientist use any member of my family as a human guinea pig like this!)
Anna, Kendal, UK
Unfortunately in England you seem determined to conduct research into matters which a long time ago were thoroughly investigated elsewhere. The benefits of hypoxia have long been recognised in Russia and Ukraine and all other former Soviet Union republics. It is sad that only now does the medical establishment acknowledge that excessive oxygen has harmful effects (particularly leading to blindness in babies!). Low oxygen in the technique known as Intermittent hypoxia training (IHT), long in successful use in the countries mentioned in the treatment of hypertension, epilepsy, Parkinson's diseases, asthma, thyroid disorders, complications following radio- and chemo-therapy, to name but a few applications, is only just finding its feet in the UK.
Dr Tamara Voronina, London, England