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The Science of Intermittent Hypoxic Exposure

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==Mechanisms==
There appear to be three mechanisms underlying the effects of IHE: regulation of respiration, mitochondrial respiration, and free-radical production.
* The regulation of respiration results in increased sensitivity of [[Breathing|breathing ]] rate to altitude, improved gas exchange in the lungs and changes to the autonomic nervous system.
* Improvements in mitochondrial respiration results in optimized use of oxygen in energy production.
* Exposure to both low and normal oxygen levels improves the body's antioxidant defense.
** Exposure of 3x (6 min low O2, 4 min normal air) per day for 14 days increased breathing volume at altitude by ~50%. Partial pressure of O<sub>2</sub> started at 50 mmHg (20,000 ft) dropping to 35 mmHg (28,000 ft). Several studies have shown similar results.
** 5x (15 min 11% O<sub>2</sub> + 15 min recovery) for 14 day produced changes to the metabolic pathways that optimize the use of oxygen.
** Other studies in rats indicate that IHE changes the ratio of fat to [[Protein|protein ]] burning in favor of fats by 80%.
** Recent studies indicate that IHE stimulates NO (Nitric Oxide) production, with the excess stored in the vascular walls. This improves blood pressure.
* Research<ref name="jack"/> using highly trained runners showed no running improvement with IHE. However, this study used IHE for 4 weeks and had O<sub>2</sub> saturation values of 89.9, 86.3, 85.9, and 81.4 for each week. The value of IHE is dependent upon the O<sub>2</sub> saturation levels, with little effect until values under 89%<ref name="HTI"/>. The athletes in the study therefore only received significant hypoxia for about one week. The athletes were given 5 min hypoxic, 5 min normal for 70 minutes total for five days per week, 4 weeks total.
* Subjects exposed hypoxia in a hypobaric chamber showed elevated EPO levels after 114 min at 9,000 feet and or after 84 minutes at 12,000 feet. EPO levels continued to rise with longer exposure. <ref name="acu"/>
* Research using the [[AltoLab]] system showed a significant improvement in sprint speed. The study used 6 min hypoxia (10,000 to 18,000 ft) with 4 min recovery for an hour a day for 15 days. The study shown a
tiny improvement in blood parameters (hemoglobin/hematocrit) normally associated with [[Altitude Training|altitude training]].<ref name="alto"/>
==Intermittent Hypoxic Exposure and Diseases==

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