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  4. Do airline pilots have more haemoglobin?
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Do airline pilots have more haemoglobin?

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Offline thedoc (OP)

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Do airline pilots have more haemoglobin?
« on: 18/05/2010 18:38:26 »
Do airline pilots have more haemoglobin?
Asked by Nat Spirit (Second Life)

               
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« Last Edit: 18/05/2010 18:38:26 by _system »
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Do airline pilots have more haemoglobin?
« Reply #1 on: 18/05/2010 18:38:26 »
Chris -  Airlines pressurise their airliners to about 7,000 feet worth of altitude, so slightly higher than ground level, and therefore, there will be a slight augmentation in haemoglobin, but not a huge one.  Probably not a physiologically (in other words, bodily) significant effect.
If those planes weren’t pressurised and they were flying at the kind of altitude they did, everyone onboard will be dead,  of course.  Most airliners are flying at more than 30,000 feet.  That’s the equivalent of the top of Mt. Everest where if you don't have supplemental oxygen there and you're not acclimatised, then you’d be dead very, very quickly.
So the answer is, when you go to high altitudes, you get a little bit more haemoglobin to compensate for the reduction in oxygen in the bloodstream, but it is proportional to how long you spend at altitude, and how high you go.  And because those planes are not flying very high – equivalently speaking because of the pressure in the cabin - and the exposure is limited, there won't be a very dramatic effect, but there might be a small one.
« Last Edit: 18/05/2010 18:38:26 by _system »
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Offline iko

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Do airline pilots have more haemoglobin?
« Reply #2 on: 20/05/2010 17:40:49 »
Hi Chris,

let me add a note to this interesting thread.
I think that altitude (1500meters) and related lower pressure should not be a major problem for pilots and their hemoglobin:
more troubles may come from the fast change of pressure during takeoffs and landings.
Passengers, even "frequent flyers", are not exposed so heavily like pilots and crews to this peculiar kind of stress.
Brisk and repeated pressure changes could hypothetically increase chances of embolism, if tiny bubbles of air manage to reach the brain through an abnormal communication between the right and left atriums (atria?) of the heart...
Is it just fantasy?
The discussion is open.

iko


http://www.avweb.com/news/aeromed/181893-1.html
« Last Edit: 20/05/2010 18:18:47 by iko »
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