What happens to your body at the top of Mount Everest - Andrew Lovering

1,520,691 views ・ 2022-06-28

TED-Ed


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If someone teleported from sea level to the top of Mt. Everest,
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things would go bad fast.
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At an altitude of 8,848 meters,
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barometric pressure is approximately 33% of what it is at sea level.
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This means there's significantly less oxygen in the air,
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and our teleported individual would likely suffocate in minutes.
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However, for people that make this same journey over the course of a month,
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it's possible to survive at the peak for hours.
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So what can happen to our bodies in just one month
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that allows us to endure this incredible altitude?
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Let’s imagine you’re one of the 5.8 billion people
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living less than 500 meters above sea level.
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When you take a breath at this altitude,
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your lungs fill up with air composed of numerous gases and compounds.
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Most important among these are oxygen molecules,
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which bind to the hemoglobin in your red blood cells.
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Blood then circulates throughout your body,
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bringing essential oxygen to all your cells.
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But as altitude increases, the air starts to get thinner.
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The relative amounts of each compound remain the same
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well into the upper atmosphere,
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but overall, there is less oxygen for our bodies to absorb.
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And if you ascend to altitudes above 2,500 meters,
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the resulting oxygen deprivation can cause a form of altitude sickness
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known as AMS,
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often causing headaches, fatigue and nausea.
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Fortunately, AMS only happens when we ascend too fast,
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because our bodies have numerous ways of adapting to high altitudes.
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Within minutes or even seconds of reaching altitudes of 1,500 meters,
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carotid chemoreceptors in your neck sense your blood’s low oxygen pressure.
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This triggers a response that increases the rate and depth of your breathing
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to counteract the lack of oxygen.
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Your heart rate also increases
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and your heart contracts more tightly to pump additional blood with each beat,
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quickly moving oxygenated blood around your body.
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All these changes happen relatively fast, and if you were to keep ascending,
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your heart rate and breathing would speed up accordingly.
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But if you stayed at this altitude for several weeks,
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you could reap the benefits of some longer-term adaptations.
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Within the first few days above 1,500 meters,
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the volume of plasma in your blood decreases,
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which increases the concentration of hemoglobin.
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Over the next two weeks, your hemoglobin levels will continue to rise,
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allowing your blood to carry even more oxygen per milliliter.
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Paired with your high heart rate,
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this new hemoglobin-rich blood efficiently distributes oxygen throughout your body.
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So much so that the volume of blood being pumped with each heartbeat
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can return to normal levels.
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Over this same time, your breathing also increases even further
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in a process called ventilatory acclimatization.
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After this several weeks of extended acclimatization,
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your body has made enough significant changes to climb even higher.
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However, you’ll still have to spend additional time acclimating along the way,
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often climbing back down to recover before ascending even higher.
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Because the summit of Everest isn't just high,
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it’s the highest place on Earth.
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And at altitudes above 3,500 meters, our bodies are under incredible stress.
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Arteries and veins in the brain dilate to speed up blood flow,
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But our smallest blood vessels, called capillaries,
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remain the same size.
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This increased pressure can cause blood vessels to leak,
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and fluid to build up in the brain.
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A similar issue can occur in the lungs,
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where low oxygen causes blood vessels to constrict,
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leading to more leaking vessels and fluid buildup.
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These two conditions— known as HACE and HAPE, respectively—
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are incredibly rare,
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but can be life-threatening if not dealt with quickly.
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Some Tibetans and South Americans with family histories
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of living at high altitude
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have genetic advantages that can prevent minor altitude sickness,
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but even they aren’t immune to these severe conditions.
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Yet despite these risks, climbers over the last century
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have proved people can go higher than scientists ever thought possible.
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Pushing past their body’s limitations,
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these climbers have redefined what humanity can adapt to.
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