Rojas-Camayo, JoseMejia, Christian RichardCallacondo, DavidDawson, Jennifer A.Posso, MargaritaGalvan, Cesar AlbertoDavila-Arango, NadiaBravo, Erick AnibalLoescher, Viky YaninaPadilla-Deza, Magaly MilagrosRojas-Valero, NoraVelasquez-Chavez, GaryClemente, JoseAlva-Lozada, GuiselaQuispe-Mauricio, AngelBardalez, SilvanaSubhi, Rami2018-07-272018-07-272018Rojas-Camayo J, Mejia CR, Callacondo D, Dawson JA, Posso M, Galvan CA. Et al. Reference values for oxygen saturation from sea level to the highest human habitation in the Andes in acclimatised persons. Thorax. 2018 Aug;73(8):776-778. DOI: 10.1136/thoraxjnl-2017-2105980040-6376http://hdl.handle.net/10230/35310Oxygen saturation, measured by pulse oximetry (SpO2), is a vital clinical measure. Our descriptive, cross-sectional study describes SpO2 measurements from 6289 healthy subjects from age 1 to 80 years at 15 locations from sea level up to the highest permanent human habitation. Oxygen saturation measurements are illustrated as percentiles. As altitude increased, SpO2 decreased, especially at altitudes above 2500 m. The increase in altitude had a significant impact on SpO2 measurements for all age groups. Our data provide a reference range for expected SpO2 measurements in people from 1 to 80 years from sea level to the highest city in the world.application/pdfeng© BMJ Publishing Group http://thorax.bmj.com/Oxigen -- MetabolismeAndes, Regió delsReference values for oxygen saturation from sea level to the highest human habitation in the Andes in acclimatised personsinfo:eu-repo/semantics/articlehttp://dx.doi.org/10.1136/thoraxjnl-2017-210598Clinical Epidemiologyinfo:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess