Khaleej Times

A life at extreme altitude shapes human body, but how?

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paris — Living the high life — growing up, in other words, at extreme altitude — forces a developing human body to conserve energy, and that can translated into shorter arms, according to a study published on Wednesday.

Nepalese men and women born and raised at 11,500 feet and up are more likely to have curtailed forearms compared to people of similar ancestry from lowland areas, scientists reported in the journal Royal Society Open Science.

Intriguing­ly, adjoining parts of the anatomy — the upper arms and hand — remain the same for both groups.

A similar pattern was uncovered in earlier research among Peruvian children, reinforcin­g the notion that harsh mountain conditions were somehow responsibl­e. “It was interestin­g to see that they both followed the same growth patterns,” lead author Stephanie Payne, a biological anthropolo­gist at the University of Cambridge, said.

The findings raise a host of questions, starting with this one: What is it about an high-altitude living that makes the body shape-shift?

“This is most likely an adaptation to improving oxygen uptake,” said Payne.

For similar reasons, indigenous peoples of the Himalayas and Andes often have barrel chests, the better to expand lung capacity and take in more oxygen.

Although air contains 21 per cent oxygen at all altitudes, it feels as if there is less of it in the mountains due to lower air pressure.

Using the measure of “effective oxygen”, the level drops by just under 40 per cent at 3,500 metres compared to sea level.

In high-mountain regions, low oxygen availabili­ty results in inefficien­t

conversion of food into energy, which means that there is less energy available for growth. This become especially true when combined with a nutrient poor diet.

But what possible advantage is there to diminished forearms and lower legs, which also tend to be foreshorte­ned among mountainfo­lk? And why not other parts of the body?

It is not so much that there is something to gain, but more that

there is nothing lost, the study conjecture­d. “The human body prioritise­s which segments to grow when there is limited energy available for growth, such as at high altitude,” said Payne.

“The full growth of the hand may be essential for manual dexterity, whilst the length of the upper arm is particular­ly important for strength.” But a shorter lower arm is apparently something humans can live with. —

 ?? AFP ?? The himalayan mountain Mount Kangtega from Khumjung village in the Everest region, some 140km northeast of Kathmandu. —
AFP The himalayan mountain Mount Kangtega from Khumjung village in the Everest region, some 140km northeast of Kathmandu. —

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