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Gustavo Zubieta-Castillo

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Professor Dr. Gustavo Zubieta-Castillo MD. (born in Oruro, Bolivia on May 20,1926) is a Bolivian physician, high altitude medicine expert, physiologist, army surgeon, writer, painter, who has been named as the "Mountain Guru" at the St. John's Medical College in Bangalore, India[1]. His greatest dedication has been to high altitude physiology. Being born at 3800m and then studying medicine at the Universidad Mayor de San Andres in the city of La Paz, at 3513 m above sea level, all his work has focused on initially high altitude physiology and later evolved to high altitude pathology. His most important scientific production is the new concepts and understanding of what was known as Chronic Mountain Sickness. This pathology characterized by an increase of red blood cells, cyanosis, ventilatory and respiratory alterations with pulmonary hypertension and hypertrophy of the right ventricle seen at high altitude, above the normal values for such altitude, was originally affirmed to be due to "loss of adaptation". He changed this misinterpretation, as he strongly stood for “The organic systems of human beings and all other species tend to adapt to any environmental change and circumstance within an optimal period of time, and never tend towards regression which would inevitably lead to death”.[2] This concept has indeed changed the way high altitude diseases are interpreted. On July 9th, 1970, he was the founder of the first high altitude clinic in the world located in La Paz, Bolivia High Altitude Pathology Institute. One of his most outstanding theories is the proposal that man has the extraordinary capability to adapt to live in the hypoxic environment of the highest point on the planet Earth: the summit of Mt. Everest.[3]


References

  1. ^ http://altitudeclinic.com/blog/2010/01/the-mountain-guru/
  2. ^ http://altitudeclinic.com/blog/2010/07/forever-loss-of-adaptation-does-not-exist/
  3. ^ Zubieta-Castillo, G.; Zubieta-Calleja, GR, Zubieta-Calleja, L. Zubieta-Castillo, Nancy (2008). "Facts that Prove that Adaptation to life at Extreme Altitude (8842m) is possible". In Adaptation Biology and Medicine 5 (Suppl 5): 348–355.

Adaptation Biology and Medicine