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1.
To determine the role of postinspiratory inspiratory activity of the diaphragm in the biphasic ventilatory response to hypoxia in unanesthetized rats, we examined diaphragmatic activity at its peak (DI), at the end of expiration (DE), and ventilation in adult unanesthetized rats during poikilocapnic hypoxia (10 % O2) sustained for 20 min. Hypoxia induced an initial increase in ventilation followed by a consistent decline. Tidal volume (VT), frequency of breathing (fR), DI and DE at first increased, then VT and DE decreased, while fR and DI remained enhanced. Phasic activation of the diaphragm (DI-DE) increased significantly at 10, 15 and 20 min of hypoxia. These results indicate that 1) the ventilatory response of unanesthetized rats to sustained hypoxia has a typical biphasic character and 2) the increased end-expiratory activity of the diaphragm limits its phasic inspiratory activation, but this increase cannot explain the secondary decline in tidal volume and ventilation.  相似文献   

2.
The bar-headed goose flies over the Himalayan mountains on its migratory route between South and Central Asia, reaching altitudes of up to 9,000 m. We compared control of breathing in this species with that of low-altitude waterfowl by exposing birds to step decreases in inspired O(2) under both poikilocapnic and isocapnic conditions. Bar-headed geese breathed substantially more than both greylag geese and pekin ducks during severe environmental (poikilocapnic) hypoxia (5% inspired O(2)). This was entirely due to an enhanced tidal volume response to hypoxia, which would have further improved parabronchial (effective) ventilation. Consequently, O(2) loading into the blood and arterial Po(2) were substantially improved. Because air convection requirements were similar between species at 5% inspired O(2), it was the enhanced tidal volume response (not total ventilation per se) that improved O(2) loading in bar-headed geese. Other observations suggest that bar-headed geese depress metabolism less than low-altitude birds during hypoxia and also may be capable of generating higher inspiratory airflows. There were no differences between species in ventilatory sensitivities to isocapnic hypoxia, the hypoxia-induced changes in blood CO(2) tensions or pH, or hypercapnic ventilatory sensitivities. Overall, our results suggest that evolutionary changes in the respiratory control system of bar-headed geese enhance O(2) loading into the blood and may contribute to this species' exceptional ability to fly high.  相似文献   

3.
Our objective was to test the hypothesis that exposure to prolonged hypoxia results in altered responsiveness to chemoreceptor stimulation. Acclimatization to hypoxia occurs rapidly in the awake goat relative to other species. We tested the sensitivity of the central and peripheral chemoreceptors to chemical stimuli before and after 4 h of either isocapnic or poikilocapnic hypoxia (arterial PO2 40 Torr). We confirmed that arterial PCO2 decreased progressively, reaching a stable value after 4 h of hypoxic exposure (poikilocapnic group). In the isocapnic group, inspired minute ventilation increased over the same time course. Thus, acclimatization occurred in both groups. In goats, isocapnic hypoxia did not result in hyperventilation on return to normoxia, whereas poikilocapnic hypoxia did cause hyperventilation, indicating a different mechanism for acclimatization and the persistent hyperventilation on return to normoxia. Goats exposed to isocapnic hypoxia exhibited an increased slope of the CO2 response curve. Goats exposed to poikilocapnic hypoxia had no increase in slope but did exhibit a parallel leftward shift of the CO2 response curve. Neither group exhibited a significant change in response to bolus NaCN injections or dopamine infusions after prolonged hypoxia. However, both groups demonstrated a similar significant increase in the ventilatory response to subsequent acute exposure to isocapnic hypoxia. The increase in hypoxic ventilatory sensitivity, which was not dependent on the modality of hypoxic exposure (isocapnic vs. poikilocapnic), reinforces the key role of the carotid chemoreceptors in ventilatory acclimatization to hypoxia.  相似文献   

4.
Acetazolamide (Acz), a carbonic anhydrase inhibitor, is used to manage periodic breathing associated with altitude and with heart failure. We examined whether Acz would alter posthypoxic ventilatory behavior in the C57BL/6J (B6) mouse model of recurrent central apnea. Experiments were performed with unanesthetized, awake adult male B6 mice (n = 9), ventilatory behavior was measured using flow-through whole body plethysmography. Mice were given an intraperitoneal injection of either vehicle or Acz (40 mg/kg), and 1 h later they were exposed to 1 min of 8% O(2)-balance N(2) (poikilocapnic hypoxia) or 12% O(2)-3% CO(2)-balance N(2) (isocapnic hypoxia) followed by rapid reoxygenation (100% O(2)). Hypercapnic response (8% CO(2)-balance O(2)) was examined in six mice. With Acz, ventilation, including respiratory frequency, tidal volume, and minute ventilation, in room air was significantly higher and hyperoxic hypercapnic ventilatory responsiveness was generally lower compared with vehicle. Poikilocapnic and isocapnic hypoxic ventilatory responsiveness were similar among treatments. One minute after reoxygenation, animals given Acz exhibited posthypoxic frequency decline, a lower coefficient of variability for frequency, and no tendency toward periodic breathing, compared with vehicle treatment. We conclude that Acz improves unstable breathing in the B6 model, without altering hypoxic response or producing short-term potentiation, but with some blunting of hypercapnic responsiveness.  相似文献   

5.
The relationship between CO2 and ventilatory response to sustained hypoxia was examined in nine normal young adults. At three different levels of end-tidal partial pressure of CO2 (PETCO2, approximately 35, 41.8, and 44.3 Torr), isocapnic hypoxia was induced for 25 min and after 7 min of breathing 21% O2, isocapnic hypoxia was reinduced for 5 min. Regardless of PETCO2 levels, the ventilatory response to sustained hypoxia was biphasic, characterized by an initial increase (acute hypoxic response, AHR), followed by a decline (hypoxic depression). The biphasic response pattern was due to alteration in tidal volume, which at all CO2 levels decreased significantly (P less than 0.05), without a significant change in breathing frequency. The magnitude of the hypoxic depression, independent of CO2, correlated significantly (r = 0.78, P less than 0.001) with the AHR, but not with the ventilatory response to CO2. The decline of minute ventilation was not significantly affected by PETCO2 [averaged 2.3 +/- 0.6, 3.8 +/- 1.3, and 4.5 +/- 2.2 (SE) 1/min for PETCO2 35, 41.8, and 44.3 Torr, respectively]. This decay was significant for PETCO2 35 and 41.8 Torr but not for 44.3 Torr. The second exposure to hypoxia failed to elicit the same AHR as the first exposure; at all CO2 levels the AHR was significantly greater (P less than 0.05) during the first hypoxic exposure than during the second. We conclude that hypoxia exhibits a long-lasting inhibitory effect on ventilation that is independent of CO2, at least in the range of PETCO2 studied, but is related to hypoxic ventilatory sensitivity.  相似文献   

6.
In 10 normal young adults, ventilation was evaluated with and without pretreatment with aminophylline, an adenosine blocker, while they breathed pure O2 1) after breathing room air and 2) after 25 min of isocapnic hypoxia (arterial O2 saturation 80%). With and without aminophylline, 5 min of hyperoxia significantly increased inspiratory minute ventilation (VI) from the normoxic base line. In control experiments, with hypoxia, VI initially increased and then declined to levels that were slightly above the normoxic base line. Pretreatment with aminophylline significantly attenuated the hypoxic ventilatory decline. During transitions to pure O2 (cessation of carotid bodies' output), VI and breathing patterns were analyzed breath by breath with a moving-average technique, searching for nadirs before and after hyperoxia. On placebo days, at the end of hypoxia, hyperoxia produced nadirs that were significantly lower than those observed with room-air breathing and also significantly lower than when hyperoxia followed normoxia, averaging, respectively, 6.41 +/- 0.52, 8.07 +/- 0.32, and 8.04 +/- 0.39 (SE) l/min. This hypoxic depression was due to significant decrease in tidal volume and prolongation of expiratory time. Aminophylline partly prevented these alterations in breathing pattern; significant posthypoxic ventilatory depression was not observed. We conclude that aminophylline attenuated hypoxic central depression of ventilation, although it does not affect hyperoxic steady-state hyperventilation. Adenosine may play a modulatory role in hypoxic but not in hyperoxic ventilation.  相似文献   

7.
Recovery of the ventilatory response to hypoxia in normal adults   总被引:10,自引:0,他引:10  
Recovery of the initial ventilatory response to hypoxia was examined after the ventilatory response had declined during sustained hypoxia. Normal young adults were exposed to two consecutive 25-min periods of sustained isocapnic hypoxia (80% O2 saturation in arterial blood), separated by varying interludes of room air breathing or an increased inspired O2 fraction (FIO2). The decline in the hypoxic ventilatory response during the 1st 25 min of hypoxia was not restored after a 7-min interlude of room air breathing; inspired ventilation (VI) at the end of the first hypoxic period was not different from VI at the beginning and end of the second hypoxic period. After a 15-min interlude of room air breathing, the hypoxic ventilatory response had begun to recover. With a 60-min interlude of room air breathing, recovery was complete; VI during the second hypoxic exposure matched VI during the first hypoxic period. Ventilatory recovery was accelerated by breathing supplemental O2. With a 15-min interlude of 0.3 FIO2 or 7 min of 1.0 FIO2, VI of the first and second hypoxic periods were equivalent. Both the decline and recovery of the hypoxic ventilatory response were related to alterations in tidal volume and mean inspiratory flow (VT/TI), with little alteration in respiratory timing. We conclude that the mechanism of the decline in the ventilatory response with sustained hypoxia may require up to 1 h for complete reversal and that the restoration is O2 sensitive.  相似文献   

8.
This study investigated whether changes in GABA-mediated neurotransmission within the nucleus of the solitary tract (NTS) contribute to the changes in breathing (resting ventilation and the acute HVR) that occur following exposure to chronic hypoxia (CH). Rats were exposed to 9 days of hypobaric hypoxia (0.5 atm) and then subjected to acute hypoxic breathing trials before and after bilateral microinjections of GABA, bicuculline (a GABAA-receptor antagonist), or bicuculline plus CGP-35348 (a GABAB receptor antagonist) into the caudal regions of the NTS. Breathing was measured using whole body plethysmography. CH caused an increase in resting ventilation when the animals were breathing 30% O2 but did not alter ventilation during acute hypoxia (10% O2). GABA alone had no effect on breathing in either the control or chronically hypoxic rats. Bicuculline and bicuculline/CGP had no effect on breathing in control rats. Following CH, bicuculline and bicuculline/CGP reduced minute ventilation (VI) during acute exposure to 30% O2 but had no effect during acute exposure to 10% O2. The bicuculline-induced reduction in VI resulted from a decrease in breathing frequency (fR) and tidal volume (VT). The bicuculline/CGP-induced reduction in VI was due to a decrease in fR with no change in VT. The results suggest that changes in GABA receptor-mediated neurotransmission, within the NTS, are involved in the increase in resting ventilation that occurs following CH.  相似文献   

9.
The hypoxic and hypercapnic ventilatory drive, gas exchange, blood lactate and pyruvate concentrations, acid-base balance, and physical working capacity were determined in three groups of healthy males: 17 residents examined at sea level (group I), 24 sea-level natives residing at 1,680-m altitude for 1 yr and examined there (group II), and 17 sea-level natives residing at 3,650-m altitude for 1 yr and examined there (group III). The piecewise linear approximation technique was used to study the ventilatory response curves, which allowed a separate analysis of slopes during the first phase of slow increase in ventilation and the second phase of sharp increase. The hypoxic ventilatory response for both isocapnic and poikilocapnic conditions was greater in group II and even greater in group III. The first signs of consciousness distortion in sea-level residents appeared at an end-tidal O2 pressure level (4.09 +/- 0.56 kPa) higher than that of temporary residents of middle (3.05 +/- 0.12) and high altitude (2.90 +/- 0.07). The hypercapnic response was also increased, although to a lesser degree. Subjects with the highest hypoxic respiratory sensitivity at high altitude demonstrated greater O2 consumption at rest, greater ventilatory response to exercise, higher physical capacity, and a less pronounced anaerobic glycolytic flux but a lower tolerance to extreme hypoxia. That is, end-tidal O2 pressure that caused a distortion of the consciousness was higher in these subjects than in those with lower hypoxic sensitivity. Two extreme types of adaptation strategy can be distinguished: active, with marked reactions of "struggle for oxygen," and passive, with reduced O2 metabolism, as well as several intermediate types.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

10.
Both isocapnic and poikilocapnic hypoxia may elicit a biphasic respiratory response, during which an initial ventilatory stimulation is followed by a reduction in breathing and diaphragm (DIA) electrical activity. To ascertain whether during adulthood other respiratory muscles have biphasic hypoxic responses similar to the DIA, in nine anesthetized cats electromyograms (EMG) were recorded from the DIA, genioglossus (GG), and triangularis sterni (TS) (n = 7) muscles during poikilocapnic hypoxia. DIA and GG EMG started at 60 +/- 4 and 9 +/- 3 units, respectively, during O2 breathing, increased to a maximum of 100 units during the 10-min hypoxic stimulus, and subsequently declined to 81 +/- 6 and 58 +/- 12 units, respectively, by the end of 10 min of hypoxia. The time course of the increase and subsequent decline was similar for the DIA and GG and for GG activity during both inspiration and expiration. Furthermore the degree to which GG EMG declined after reaching its peak activity level correlated with the magnitude of the respective decline in DIA EMG (r = 0.79, P less than 0.02). The TS, in contrast, was maximally active either during O2 breathing or very early during hypoxia, and its activity declined progressively thereafter (to 13 +/- 6% of its peak value at the end of 10 min of hypoxia). The degree to which TS EMG declined did not correlate with the degree to which DIA or GG EMG declined.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

11.
Cerebral blood flow and O2 delivery during exercise are important for well-being at altitude but have not been studied. We expected flow to increase on arrival at altitude and then to fall as O2 saturation and hemoglobin increased, thereby maintaining cerebral O2 delivery. We used Doppler ultrasound to measure internal carotid artery flow velocity at sea level and on Pikes Peak, CO (4,300 m). In an initial study (1987, n = 7 men) done to determine the effect of brief (5-min) exercises of increasing intensity, we found at sea level that velocity [24.8 +/- 1.4 (SE) cm/s rest] increased by 15 +/- 7, 30 +/- 6, and 22 +/- 8% for cycle exercises at 33, 71, and 96% of maximal O2 uptake, respectively. During acute hypobaric hypoxia in a decompression chamber (inspired PO2 = 83 Torr), velocity (23.2 +/- 1.4 cm/s rest) increased by 33 +/- 6, 20 +/- 5, and 17 +/- 9% for exercises at 45, 72, and 98% of maximal O2 uptake, respectively. After 18 days on Pikes Peak (inspired PO2 = 87 Torr), velocity (26.6 +/- 1.5 cm/s rest) did not increase with exercise. A subsequent study (1988, n = 7 men) of the effect of prolonged exercise (45 min at approximately 100 W) found at sea level that velocity (24.8 +/- 1.7 cm/s rest) increased by 22 +/- 6, 13 +/- 5, 17 +/- 4, and 12 +/- 3% at 5, 15, 30, and 45 min.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

12.
We examined the effects of carotid body denervation on ventilatory responses to normoxia (21% O2 in N2 for 240 s), hypoxic hypoxia (10 and 15% O2 in N2 for 90 and 120 s, respectively), and hyperoxic hypercapnia (5% CO2 in O2 for 240 s) in the spontaneously breathing urethane-anesthetized mouse. Respiratory measurements were made with a whole body, single-chamber plethysmograph before and after cutting both carotid sinus nerves. Baseline measurements in air showed that carotid body denervation was accompanied by lower minute ventilation with a reduction in respiratory frequency. On the basis of measurements with an open-circuit system, no significant differences in O2 consumption or CO2 production before and after chemodenervation were found. During both levels of hypoxia, animals with intact sinus nerves had increased respiratory frequency, tidal volume, and minute ventilation; however, after chemodenervation, animals experienced a drop in respiratory frequency and ventilatory depression. Tidal volume responses during 15% hypoxia were similar before and after carotid body denervation; during 10% hypoxia in chemodenervated animals, there was a sudden increase in tidal volume with an increase in the rate of inspiration, suggesting that gasping occurred. During hyperoxic hypercapnia, ventilatory responses were lower with a smaller tidal volume after chemodenervation than before. We conclude that the carotid bodies are essential for maintaining ventilation during eupnea, hypoxia, and hypercapnia in the anesthetized mouse.  相似文献   

13.
This study was designed to investigate the influence of hypoxia-evoked augmented breaths (ABs) on respiratory-related tongue protrudor and retractor muscle activities and inspiratory pump muscle output. Genioglossus (GG) and hyoglossus (HG) electromyogram (EMG) activities and respiratory-related tongue movements were compared with peak esophageal pressure (Pes; negative change in pressure during inspiration) and minute Pes (Pes x respiratory frequency = Pes/min) before and after ABs evoked by sustained poikilocapnic, isocapnic, and hypercapnic hypoxia in spontaneously breathing, anesthetized rats. ABs evoked by poikilocapnic and isocapnic hypoxia triggered long-lasting (duration at least 10 respiratory cycles) reductions in GG and HG EMG activities and tongue movements relative to pre-AB levels, but Pes was reduced transiently (duration of <10 respiratory cycles) after ABs. Adding 7% CO(2) to the hypoxic inspirate had no effect on the frequency of evoked ABs, but this prevented long-term declines in tongue muscle activities. Bilateral vagotomy abolished hypoxia-induced ABs and stabilized drive to the tongue muscles during each hypoxic condition. We conclude that, in the rat, hypoxia-evoked ABs 1) elicit long-lasting reductions in protrudor and retractor tongue muscle activities, 2) produce short-term declines in inspiratory pump muscle output, and 3) are mediated by vagal afferents. The more prolonged reductions in pharyngeal airway vs. pump muscle activities may lead to upper airway narrowing or collapse after spontaneous ABs.  相似文献   

14.
Chronic hypoxia increases the sensitivity of the central nervous system to afferent input from carotid body chemoreceptors. We hypothesized that this process involves N-methyl-D-aspartate (NMDA) receptor-mediated mechanisms and predicted that chronic hypoxia would change the effect of the NMDA receptor blocker dizocilpine (MK-801) on the poikilocapnic hypoxic ventilatory response (HVR). Male Sprague-Dawley rats were studied before and after acclimatization to hypoxia (70 Torr inspiratory Po(2) for 9 days). We measured ventilation (VI) and the HVR before and after systemic MK-801 treatment (3 mg/kg ip). MK-801 resulted in a constant respiratory frequency (approximately 175 min(-1)) during acute exposure to 10% and 30% O(2) before and after acclimatization. MK-801 had no effect on tidal volume (VT) before acclimatization, but it significantly decreased Vt when the animals were breathing 10% O(2) after acclimatization. The net effect of MK-801 was to eliminate the O(2) sensitivity of Vi before (via changes in respiratory frequency) and after (via changes in VT) acclimatization. Hence, chronic hypoxia altered the effect of MK-801 on the acute HVR, primarily because of increased effects on Vt. This indicates that changes in NMDA receptor-mediated neurotransmission may be involved in ventilatory acclimatization to hypoxia. However, further experiments are necessary to determine the precise location of such plasticity in the central nervous system.  相似文献   

15.
Persons with acute altitude sickness hypoventilate at high altitude compared with persons without symptoms. We hypothesized that their hypoventilation was due to low initial hypoxic ventilatory responsiveness, combined with subsequent blunting of ventilation by hypocapnia and/or prolonged hypoxia. To test this hypothesis, we compared eight subjects with histories of acute altitude sickness with four subjects who had been asymptomatic during prior altitude exposure. At a simulated altitude of 4,800 m, the eight susceptible subjects developed symptoms of altitude sickness and had lower minute ventilations and higher end-tidal PCO2's than the four asymptomatic subjects. In measurements made prior to altitude exposure, ventilatory responsiveness to acute hypoxia was reduced in symptomatic compared to asymptomatic subjects, both when measured under isocapnic and poikolocapnic (no added CO2) conditions. Diminution of the poikilocapnic relative to the isocapnic hypoxic response was similar in the two groups. Ventilation fell, and end-tidal PCO2 rose in both groups during 30 min of steady-state hypoxia relative to values observed acutely. After 4.5 h at 4,800 m, ventilation was lower than values observed acutely at the same arterial O2 saturation. The reduction in ventilation in relation to the hypoxemia present was greater in symptomatic than in asymptomatic persons. Thus the hypoventilation in symptomatic compared to asymptomatic subjects was attributable both to a lower acute hypoxic response and a subsequent greater blunting of ventilation at high altitude.  相似文献   

16.
Metabolic rates (O2 consumption and CO2 production) were similar in the Djungarian hamster and the white mice. The Djungarian hamster had a decreased tidal volume, an increased frequency of breathing (due to a lengthened expiratory time) and a decreased minute ventilation compared to that of the mouse. Although the relative ventilatory increase in response to hypercapnia or hypoxia was similar in the hamster and the mouse, the breathing patterns during exposures differed.  相似文献   

17.
Tidal volume, respiratory frequency, and minute volume were measured with total body plethysmography. Both hypercapnic (0-7% CO2) and hypoxic (13-21% O2) gas mixtures caused "dose" related hyperventilation in the hamsters. However, there was no synergism between combined stimuli. Rats exhibited greater hyperventilation than the hamsters during hypercapnic + hypoxic and hypercapnic exposures. Hamsters responded more than the rats to hypoxia alone. Greater blood buffering capacity of hamsters is a possible explanation for the species differences in ventilatory sensitivity.  相似文献   

18.
The effects of body position on ventilatory responses to chemical stimuli have rarely been studied in experimental animals, despite evidence that position may be a factor in respiratory results. The purpose of this study was to test whether body position could affect acute ventilatory responses to 4-min periods of moderate hypercapnia (5% CO(2) in O(2)) and poikilocapnic hypoxia (15% O(2) in N(2)) in the urethane-anaesthetised mouse. Respiratory measurements were conducted with mice in the prone and supine positions with a whole-body, single-chamber plethysmograph. During hypoxia, the time course of minute ventilation (V (E)) was similar in the two positions, but the breathing pattern was different. After the response peak, V (E) depended on respiratory frequency (f) and tidal volume (V(T)) in the prone position but mainly on V(T) in the supine position. In the supine position, f declined below the baseline values toward the end of hypoxic exposure. During hypercapnia, there were no ventilatory differences between the prone and supine positions. Brief hypoxic exposure elicited f depression in the supine position in the anaesthetised mouse. The depressive effect on f suggests that the supine position may not be optimal for sustaining ventilation, particularly during hypoxia.  相似文献   

19.
Carbon dioxide effects on the ventilatory response to sustained hypoxia   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
We examined the interrelation between CO2 and the ventilatory response to moderate (80% arterial saturation) sustained hypoxia in normal young adults. On a background of continuous CO2-stimulated hyperventilation, hypoxia was introduced and sustained for 25 min. Initially, with the introduction of hypoxia onto hypercapnia, there was a brisk additional increase in inspiratory minute ventilation (VI) to 284% of resting VI, but the response was not sustained and hypoxic VI declined by 36% to a level intermediate between the initial increase and the preexisting hypercapnic hyperventilation. Through the continuous hypercapnia, the changes in hypoxic ventilation resulted from significant alterations in tidal volume (VT) and mean inspiratory flow (VT/TI) without changes in respiratory timing. In another experiment, sustained hypoxia was introduced on the usual background of room air, either with isocapnia or without maintenance of end-tidal CO2 (ETCO2) (poikilocapnic hypoxia). Regardless of the degree of maintenance of ETCO2, during 25 min of sustained hypoxia, VI showed an initial brisk increase and then declined by 35-40% of resting VI to a level intermediate between the initial response and resting room air VI. For both isocapnia and poikilocapnic conditions, the attenuation of VI was an expression of a diminished VT. Thus the decline in ventilation with sustained hypoxia occurred regardless of the background ETCO2, suggesting that the mechanism underlying the hypoxic decline is independent of CO2.  相似文献   

20.
Oxygen transport to exercising leg in chronic hypoxia   总被引:4,自引:0,他引:4  
Residence at high altitude could be accompanied by adaptations that alter the mechanisms of O2 delivery to exercising muscle. Seven sea level resident males, aged 22 +/- 1 yr, performed moderate to near-maximal steady-state cycle exercise at sea level in normoxia [inspired PO2 (PIO2) 150 Torr] and acute hypobaric hypoxia (barometric pressure, 445 Torr; PIO2, 83 Torr), and after 18 days' residence on Pikes Peak (4,300 m) while breathing ambient air (PIO2, 86 Torr) and air similar to that at sea level (35% O2, PIO2, 144 Torr). In both hypoxia and normoxia, after acclimatization the femoral arterial-iliac venous O2 content difference, hemoglobin concentration, and arterial O2 content, were higher than before acclimatization, but the venous PO2 (PVO2) was unchanged. Thermodilution leg blood flow was lower but calculated arterial O2 delivery and leg VO2 similar in hypoxia after vs. before acclimatization. Mean arterial pressure (MAP) and total peripheral resistance in hypoxia were greater after, than before, acclimatization. We concluded that acclimatization did not increase O2 delivery but rather maintained delivery via increased arterial oxygenation and decreased leg blood flow. The maintenance of PVO2 and the higher MAP after acclimatization suggested matching of O2 delivery to tissue O2 demands, with vasoconstriction possibly contributing to the decreased flow.  相似文献   

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