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1.
The importance of aortic chemoreceptors in the circulatory responses to severe carbon monoxide (CO) hypoxia was studied in anesthetized dogs. The aortic chemoreceptors were surgically denervated in eight dogs prior to the induction of CO hypoxia, with nine other dogs serving as intact controls. Values for both whole body and hindlimb blood flow, vascular resistance, and O2 uptake were determined prior to and at 30 min of CO hypoxia in the two groups. Arterial O2 content was reduced 65% using an in situ dialysis method to produce CO hypoxia. At 30 min of hypoxia, cardiac output increased but limb blood flow remained at prehypoxic levels in both groups. This indicated that aortic chemoreceptor input was not necessary for the increase in cardiac output during severe CO hypoxia, nor for the diversion of this increased flow to nonmuscle tissues. Limb O2 uptake decreased during CO hypoxia in the aortic-denervated group but remained at prehypoxic levels in the intact group. The lower resting values for limb blood flow in the aortic-denervated animals required a greater level of O2 extraction to maintain resting O2 uptake. When CO hypoxia was superimposed upon this compensation, an O2 supply limitation occurred because the limb failed to vasodilate even as maximal levels for O2 extraction were approached.  相似文献   

2.
We wished to see whether aortic chemoreceptors and other vagal afferent traffic played an essential role in the circulatory adjustments to hypoxic hypoxia. Aortic chemoreceptors were denervated (AD) in one group (n = 6) of anesthetized dogs, bilateral cervical vagotomy (V) was done on a second group (n = 6), and a third group (n = 6) was sham-operated to serve as a control. Venous outflow from the left hindlimb was isolated. After a 20-min control period of ventilation with room air, the animals were ventilated for 60 min with 9% of O2 in N2. Arterial, mixed venous, and hindlimb venous blood samples were taken every 20 min. The cardiac output response to hypoxic hypoxia was attenuated at 40 and 60 min in both the AD and V groups (p less than 0.05). Hindlimb blood flow increased equally in all three groups during hypoxia. The pressor response at the onset of hypoxia (20 min) was abolished in the AD and V groups, but mean arterial pressure fell to similar levels in all three groups by 60 min of hypoxia. We concluded that reflex aortic chemoreceptor stimulation during hypoxia augmented cardiac output mostly by effects on the venous side of the circulation but played no role in skeletal muscle vascular responses to hypoxic hypoxia.  相似文献   

3.
Redistribution of blood flow away from resting skeletal muscles does not occur during anemic hypoxia even when whole body oxygen uptake is not maintained. In the present study, the effects of sympathetic nerve stimulation on both skeletal muscle and hindlimb blood flow were studied prior to and during anemia in anesthetized, paralyzed, and ventilated dogs. In one series (skeletal muscle group, n = 8) paw blood flow was excluded by placing a tourniquet around the ankle; in a second series (hindlimb group, n = 8) no tourniquet was placed at the ankle. The distal end of the transected left sciatic nerve was stimulated to produce a maximal vasoconstrictor response for 4-min intervals at normal hematocrit (Hct.) and at 30 min of anemia (Hct. = 14%). Arterial blood pressure and hindlimb or muscle blood flow were measured; resistance and vascular hindrance were calculated. Nerve stimulation decreased blood flow (p less than 0.05) in the hindlimb and muscle groups at normal Hct. Blood flow rose (p less than 0.05) during anemia and was decreased (p less than 0.05) in both groups during nerve stimulation. However, the blood flow values in both groups during nerve stimulation in anemic animals were greater (p less than 0.05) than those at normal Hct. Hindlimb and muscle vascular resistance fell significantly during anemia and nerve stimulation produced a greater increase in vascular resistance at normal Hct. Vascular hindrance in muscle, but not hindlimb, was less during nerve stimulation in anemia than at normal Hct.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

4.
To better understand what makes the kidney susceptible to tissue hypoxia, we compared, in the rabbit kidney and hindlimb, the ability of feedback mechanisms governing oxygen consumption (Vo(2)) and oxygen delivery (Do(2)) to attenuate tissue hypoxia during hypoxemia. In the kidney (cortex and medulla) and hindlimb (biceps femoris muscle), we determined responses of whole organ blood flow and Vo(2), and local perfusion and tissue Po(2), to reductions in Do(2) mediated by graded systemic hypoxemia. Progressive hypoxemia reduced tissue Po(2) similarly in the renal cortex, renal medulla, and biceps femoris. Falls in tissue Po(2) could be detected when arterial oxygen content was reduced by as little as 4-8%. Vo(2) remained stable during progressive hypoxemia, only tending to fall once arterial oxygen content was reduced by 55% for the kidney or 42% for the hindlimb. Even then, the fall in renal Vo(2) could be accounted for by reduced oxygen demand for sodium transport rather than limited oxygen availability. Hindlimb blood flow and local biceps femoris perfusion increased progressively during graded hypoxia. In contrast, neither total renal blood flow nor cortical or medullary perfusion was altered by hypoxemia. Our data suggest that the absence in the kidney of hyperemic responses to hypoxia, and the insensitivity of renal Vo(2) to limited oxygen availability, contribute to kidney hypoxia during hypoxemia. The susceptibility of the kidney to tissue hypoxia, even in relatively mild hypoxemia, may have important implications for the progression of kidney disease, particularly in patients at high altitude or with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease.  相似文献   

5.
The influence of cardiovascular changes on ventilation has been demonstrated in adult animals and humans (Jones, French, Weissman & Wasserman, 1981; Wasserman, Whipp & Castagna 1974). It has been suggested that neonatal hypoxic ventilatory depression may be related to some of the hemodynamic changes that occur during hypoxia (Brown & Lawson, 1988; Darnall, 1985; Suguihara, Bancalari, Bancalari, Hehre & Gerhardt, 1986). To test the possible relationship between the cardiovascular and ventilatory response to hypoxia in the newborn, eleven sedated spontaneously breathing piglets (age: 5.9 +/- 1.6 days; weight: 1795 +/- 317 g; SD) were studied before and after alpha adrenergic blockade with phenoxybenzamine. Minute ventilation (VE) was measured with a pneumotachograph, cardiac output (CO) by thermodilution and total and regional brain blood flow (BBF) with radiolabeled microspheres. Measurements were performed while the animals were breathing room air and after 10 min of hypoxia induced by breathing 10% O2. Hypoxia was again induced one hour after infusion of phenoxybenzamine (6 mg/kg over 30 min). After 10 min of hypoxia, in the absence of phenoxybenzamine, the animals responded with marked increases in VE (P less than 0.001), CO (P less than 0.001), BBF, and brain stem blood flow (BSBF) (P less than 0.02). However, the normal hemodynamic response to hypoxia was eliminated after alpha adrenergic blockade. There were significant decreases in systemic arterial blood pressure, CO, and BBF during hypoxia after phenoxybenzamine infusion; nevertheless, VE increased significantly (P less than 0.001).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

6.
The effect of increased sympathetic activity on skeletal muscle blood flow during acute anemic hypoxia was studied in 16 anesthetized dogs. Sympathetic activity was altered by clamping the carotid arteries bilaterally below the carotid sinus. One group (n = 8) was beta blocked by administration of propranolol (1 mg/kg); a second group (n = 8) was untreated. Venous outflow from the left hindlimb was isolated for measurement of blood flow and O2 uptake (VO2). After a 20-min control period, both carotid arteries were clamped (CC) for 20 min followed by a 20-min recovery period. The sequence was repeated after hematocrit was lowered to about 15% by dextran exchange for blood. Prior to anemia, CC did not alter cardiac output or limb blood flow in either group. After induction of anemia, hindlimb resistance was higher with CC in the beta block than in the no block group. Both limb blood flow and VO2 fell in the beta-block group with CC during anemia. Beta block also prevented the additive increases in whole body VO2 seen with CC and induction of anemia. The data showed that the increased vasoconstrictor tone that was obtained with beta block during anemia was successful in redistributing the lower viscosity blood away from resting skeletal muscle, even to the point that muscle VO2 was decreased.  相似文献   

7.
This study investigated the effect of physical training on muscle blood flow (BF) in rats with peripheral arterial insufficiency during treadmill running. Bilateral stenosis of the femoral artery of adult rats (300-350 g) was performed to reduce exercise hyperemia in the hindlimb but not limit resting muscle BF. Rats were divided into normal sedentary, acute stenosed (stenosed 3 days before the experiment), stenosed sedentary (limited to cage activity), and stenosed trained (run on a treadmill by a progressively intense program, up to 50-60 min/day, 5 days/wk for 6-8 wk). Hindlimb BF was determined with 85Sr- and 141Ce-labeled microspheres at a low (20 m/min) and high treadmill speed (30-40 m/min depending on ability). Maximal hindlimb BF was reduced to approximately 50% normal in the acute stenosed group. Total hindlimb BF (81 +/- 5 ml.min-1.100 g-1) did not change in stenosed sedentary animals with 6-8 wk of cage activity, but a redistribution of BF occurred within the hindlimb. Two factors contributed to a higher BF to the distal limb muscle of the trained animals. A redistribution BF within the hindlimb occurred in stenosed trained animals; distal limb BF increased to approximately 80% (P less than 0.001) of the proximal tissue. In addition, an increase in total hindlimb BF with training indicates that collateral BF has been enhanced (P less than 0.025). The associated increase in oxygen delivery to the relatively ischemic muscle probably contributed to the markedly improved exercise tolerance evident in the trained animals.  相似文献   

8.

Background

It is well known that hypoxic exercise in healthy individuals increases limb blood flow, leg oxygen extraction and limb vascular conductance during knee extension exercise. However, the effect of hypoxia on cardiac output, and total vascular conductance is less clear. Furthermore, the oxygen delivery response to hypoxic exercise in well trained individuals is not well known. Therefore our aim was to determine the cardiac output (Doppler echocardiography), vascular conductance, limb blood flow (Doppler echocardiography) and muscle oxygenation response during hypoxic knee extension in normally active and endurance-trained males.

Methods

Ten normally active and nine endurance-trained males (VO2max = 46.1 and 65.5 mL/kg/min, respectively) performed 2 leg knee extension at 25, 50, 75 and 100% of their maximum intensity in both normoxic and hypoxic conditions (FIO2 = 15%; randomized order). Results were analyzed with a 2-way mixed model ANOVA (group × intensity).

Results

The main finding was that in normally active individuals hypoxic sub-maximal exercise (25 – 75% of maximum intensity) brought about a 3 fold increase in limb blood flow but decreased stroke volume compared to normoxia. In the trained group there were no significant changes in stroke volume, cardiac output and limb blood flow at sub-maximal intensities (compared to normoxia). During maximal intensity hypoxic exercise limb blood flow increased approximately 300 mL/min compared to maximal intensity normoxic exercise.

Conclusion

Cardiorespiratory fitness likely influences the oxygen delivery response to hypoxic exercise both at a systemic and limb level. The increase in limb blood flow during maximal exercise in hypoxia (both active and trained individuals) suggests a hypoxic stimulus that is not present in normoxic conditions.
  相似文献   

9.
The effects of normobaric hyperoxia on the oxygen uptake (VO2) and cardiovascular responses of the whole body and hindlimb during anemia were investigated. Anesthetized, paralyzed dogs were ventilated for 20-min periods with room air (normoxia), 100% O2 (hyperoxia), and returned to room air. Anemia (hematocrit = 15%) was then induced by isovolemic dextran-for-blood exchange and the normoxia, hyperoxia, normoxia sequence was repeated. Whole body VO2 and cardiac output rose following anemia, and then fell (p less than 0.05) with hyperoxia during anemia. These responses were not abolished by beta-blockade with propranolol (1 mg/kg, iv) or bilateral vagotomy. The hindlimb data for blood flow and VO2 were similar in direction to those of the whole body but were more variable. Section of the sciatic and femoral nerves did not appear to have significant effect on the limb responses to hyperoxia. The decrease in whole body and hindlimb VO2 with hyperoxia during anemia may have resulted from a redistribution of capillary blood flow away from exchange vessels in response to the elevated PO2.  相似文献   

10.
The metabolic adaptation of the hindlimb in the fetus to a reversible period of adverse intrauterine conditions and, subsequently, to a further episode of acute hypoxemia has been examined. Sixteen sheep fetuses were chronically instrumented with vascular catheters and transit-time flow probes. In nine of these fetuses, umbilical blood flow was reversibly reduced by 30% from baseline for 3 days (umbilical cord compression), while the remaining fetuses acted as sham-operated, age-matched controls. Acute hypoxemia was subsequently induced in all fetuses by reducing maternal fractional inspired oxygen concentration for 1 h. Paired hindlimb arteriovenous blood samples were taken at appropriate intervals during cord compression and acute hypoxemia, and by using femoral blood flow and the Fick principle, substrate delivery, uptake, and output were calculated. Umbilical cord compression reduced blood oxygen content and delivery to the hindlimb and increased hindlimb oxygen extraction and blood glucose and lactate concentration in the fetus. However, hindlimb glucose and oxygen consumption were unaltered during umbilical cord compression. In contrast, hindlimb oxygen delivery and uptake were significantly reduced in all fetuses during subsequent acute hypoxemia, but glucose extraction, oxygen extraction, and hindlimb lactate output significantly increased in sham-operated control fetuses only. Preexposure of the fetus to a temporary period of adverse intrauterine conditions alters the metabolic response of the fetal hindlimb to subsequent acute stress. Additional data suggest that circulating blood lactate may be derived from sources other than the fetal hindlimb under these circumstances. The lack of hindlimb lactate output during acute hypoxemia in umbilical cord-compressed fetuses, despite a significant fall in oxygen delivery to and uptake by the hindlimb, suggests that the fetal hindlimb may not respire anaerobically after exposure to adverse intrauterine conditions. hypoxia  相似文献   

11.
We questioned whether carbon monoxide hypoxia (COH) would affect peripheral blood flow by neural activation of adrenoceptors to the extent we had found in other forms of hypoxia. We studied this problem in hindlimb muscles of four groups of anesthetized dogs (untreated, alpha 1-blocked, alpha 1 + alpha 2-blocked, and beta 2-blocked). Cardiac output increased, but hindlimb blood flow (QL) and resistance (RL) remained at prehypoxic levels during COH (O2 content reduced 50%) in untreated animals. When activity in the sciatic nerve was reversibly cold blocked, QL doubled and RL decreased 50%. These changes with nerve block were the same during COH, suggesting that neural activity to hindlimb vasculature was not increased by COH. In animals treated with phenoxybenzamine (primarily alpha 1-blocked), RL dropped (approximately 50%) during COH, an indication that catecholamines played a significant role in maintaining tone to skeletal muscle. Animals with both alpha 1 + alpha 2-adrenergic blockade (phenoxybenzamine and yohimbine added) did not survive COH. RL was higher in beta 2-block than in the untreated group during COH, but nerve cooling indicated that beta 2-adrenoceptor vasodilation was accomplished primarily by humoral means. The above findings demonstrated that adrenergic receptors were important in the regulation of QL and RL during COH, but they were not activated by sympathetic nerve stimulation to the limb muscles.  相似文献   

12.
Systemic hemodynamic adjustments involved in the control of cardiac output (CO) were examined in chronically instrumented unanesthetized sheep inhaling gas mixtures resulting in hypocapnic hypoxia (H) [arterial pH (pHa) = 7.53, arterial partial pressure of O2 (Pao2) = 30 Torr, arterial partial pressure of CO2 (Paco2) = 29 Torr] or hypercapnic hypoxia (HCH) (pHa = 7.14, Pao2 = 34 Torr, Paco2 = 72 Torr) for 1 h. H (n = 7) and HCH (n = 6) resulted in 26% and 61% increases in CO, respectively, and mean systemic arterial pressure rose to a greater extent during HCH. Both H and HCH resulted in increased blood flow (microsphere method) to the peripheral systemic circulation including the brain, heart, diaphragm, and nonrespiratory skeletal muscle (the latter blood flow increased 120% during H and 380% during HCH). Gastrointestinal and renal blood flow remained unchanged during H and HCH. Transit time of green dye from the pulmonary artery to regional veins in the hindlimb and intestine was 5.0 and 8.2 s, respectively, during base-line conditions and remained unchanged with HCH. During HCH, regional O2 consumption increased 274% for the hindlimb and decreased 39% for the intestine. Total catecholamines rose 250% during H and 3,700% during HCH. During hypocapnic and hypercapnic hypoxia, CO is augmented in part by systemic hemodynamic adjustments that include a redistribution of blood flow and a translocation of blood volume to the fast transit time peripheral systemic circuit. The sympathetic nervous system may play an important role in mediating these systemic hemodynamic adjustments.  相似文献   

13.
Previous studies have shown that in dogs performing mild to moderate treadmill exercise, partial graded reductions in hindlimb blood flow cause active skeletal muscle to become ischemic and metabolites to accumulate thus evoking the muscle metaboreflex. This leads to a substantial reflex increase in mean arterial pressure (MAP) mediated almost solely via a rise in cardiac output (CO). However, during severe exercise CO is likely near maximal and thus metaboreflex-mediated increases in MAP may be attenuated. We therefore evoked the metaboreflex via partial graded reductions in hindlimb blood flow in seven dogs during mild, moderate, and severe treadmill exercise. During mild and moderate exercise there was a large rise in CO (1.5 +/- 0.2 and 2.2 +/- 0.3 l/min, respectively), whereas during severe exercise no significant increase in CO occurred. The rise in CO caused a marked pressor response that was significantly attenuated during severe exercise (26.3 +/- 7.0, 33.2 +/- 5.6, and 12.2 +/- 4.8 mmHg, respectively). We conclude that during severe exercise the metaboreflex pressor response mechanisms are altered such that the ability of this reflex to increase CO is abolished, and reduced pressor response occurs only via peripheral vasoconstriction. This shift in mechanisms likely limits the effectiveness of the metaboreflex to increase blood flow to ischemic active skeletal muscle. Furthermore, because the metaboreflex is a flow-raising reflex and not a pressure-raising reflex, it may be most appropriate to describe the metaboreflex magnitude based on its ability to evoke a rise in CO and not a rise in MAP.  相似文献   

14.
Eight exercise-trained miniature swine were studied during prolonged treadmill runs (100 min) under fasting and preexercise feeding conditions. Each animal ran at identical external work loads that corresponded to 65% of the heart rate reserve (210-220 beats/min) for the two exercise bouts. Cardiac outputs and stroke volumes were higher and heart rates lower for fed than for fasting runs (P less than 0.05). Preexercise feeding did not alter oxygen consumption, core temperature, mean arterial pressure, and arterial-mixed venous oxygen difference during prolonged exercise; however, mixed venous lactate concentration was lower at end exercise than during fasting conditions (1.2 vs. 2.6 mM, P less than 0.05). Microsphere measurements of regional blood flow revealed significantly higher total gastrointestinal flow (23%) for fed than for fasting conditions. Throughout the exercise bout, blood flow to the biceps femoris, semitendinosus, and tibialis anterior muscles was lower in fed than in fasted animals (P less than 0.05). Combined hindlimb muscle blood flow averaged 15 ml.min-1.100 g-1 (18%, P less than 0.05) lower under feeding than fasting run conditions. These findings provide further evidence that cardiovascular reflexes originate in the gut after feeding to increase cardiac output and redistribute a portion of the blood flow away from active muscle to the gastrointestinal tract during prolonged exercise.  相似文献   

15.
Cerebral blood flow (CBF) and the arteriovenous (A-V) difference for choline (Ch) across brain, lung, splanchnic territory, liver, kidney, and lower limb were studied in anesthetized, mechanically ventilated rats subjected to 10-20-min periods of hypoxia induced by lowering the inspired O2 concentration to 13%. A large, time-dependent increase in arterial blood Ch concentration occurred during hypoxia. This phenomenon coincided with a net rate of uptake of Ch by the brain during hypoxia (0.81 +/- 0.24 nmol/min, n = 10; p less than 0.05), which contrasted with a net rate of loss of Ch by this organ during the control period that preceded hypoxia (-0.20 +/- 0.08 nmol/min, n = 10; p less than 0.05). During hypoxia, lungs and splanchnic territory showed negative A-V differences for Ch levels (net Ch loss), whereas brain, liver, kidney, and lower limb showed positive A-V differences for Ch levels (net Ch uptake). Ch output from lungs was already detected at 5 min within the period of hypoxia and reversed rapidly after restoration of normal oxygenation. On the other hand, Ch output from the splanchnic territory became evident only 10 min after commencement of hypoxia and outlasted this experimental condition. It is concluded that extracerebral production of Ch during hypocapnic hypoxia raises the arterial concentration of this molecule and, by reversing the gradient across cerebral capillaries, prevents the cerebral loss of Ch in this condition.  相似文献   

16.
Effect of progressive exercise on lung fluid balance in sheep   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
The purpose of this study is to determine the roles of cardiac output and microvascular pressure on changes in lung fluid balance during exercise in awake sheep. We studied seven sheep during progressive treadmill exercise to exhaustion (10% grade), six sheep during prolonged constant-rate exercise for 45-60 min, and five sheep during hypoxia (fraction of inspired O2 = 0.12) and hypoxic exercise. We made continuous measurements of pulmonary arterial, left atrial, and systemic arterial pressures, lung lymph flow, and cardiac output. Exercise more than doubled cardiac output and increased pulmonary arterial pressures from 19.2 +/- 1 to 34.8 +/- 3.5 (SE) cmH2O. Lung lymph flow increased rapidly fivefold during progressive exercise and returned immediately to base-line levels when exercise was stopped. Lymph-to-plasma protein concentration ratios decreased slightly but steadily. Lymph flows correlated closely with changes in cardiac output and with calculated microvascular pressures. The drop in lymph-to-plasma protein ratio during exercise suggests that microvascular pressure rises during exercise, perhaps due to increased pulmonary venous pressure. Lymph flow and protein content were unaffected by hypoxia, and hypoxia did not alter the lymph changes seen during normoxic exercise. Lung lymph flow did not immediately return to base line after prolonged exercise, suggesting hydration of the lung interstitium.  相似文献   

17.
The importance of aortic chemoreceptors in the circulatory and metabolic responses during acute anemia was studied in anesthetized dogs. Data were obtained from nine dogs in which the aortic chemoreceptors were surgically denervated prior to induction of anemia, and from seven sham-operated dogs. Cardiac output (QT), limb blood flow (QL), limb and whole body oxygen uptake (VO2) were determined at normal hematocrit (Hct) and at 30 min of anemia (Hct = 13%) produced by isovolemic dextran-for-blood exchange. At 30 min of anemia, QT was increased from 91 to 186 mL . kg-1 . min-1 (p less than 0.01) and from 99 to 153 mL . kg-1 . min-1 (p less than 0.01) in the sham and denervated groups, respectively. The increase in QT during anemia was less (p less than 0.05) in the aortic-denervated series. Limb flow was also increased during anemia in both groups (p less than 0.01); the mean value of 89 mL . kg-1 . min-1 in the denervated group was less than that of 130 mL . kg-1 . min-1 observed in the sham animals (p less than 0.05). Whole body VO2 decreased (p less than 0.05) in the denervated group at 30 min of anemia; limb VO2 was maintained at the preanemic control value in both groups. The data indicate that during acute anemia the aortic chemoreceptors contribute to the increase in QT.  相似文献   

18.
Effect of hindlimb unweighting on tissue blood flow in the rat.   总被引:5,自引:0,他引:5  
The purpose of this study was to characterize the distribution of blood flow in the rat during hindlimb unweighting (HU) and post-HU standing and exercise and examine whether the previously reported (Witzmann et al., J. Appl. Physiol. 54: 1242-1248, 1983) elevation in anaerobic metabolism observed with contractile activity in the atrophied soleus muscle was caused by a reduced hindlimb blood flow. After either 15 days of HU or cage control, blood flow was measured with radioactive microspheres during unweighting, normal standing, and running on a treadmill (15 m/min). In another group of control and experimental animals, blood flow was measured during preexercise (PE) treadmill standing and treadmill running (15 m/min). Soleus muscle blood flow was not different between groups during unweighting, PE standing, and running at 15 m/min. Chronic unweighting resulted in the tendency for greater blood flow to muscles composed of predominantly fast-twitch glycolytic fibers. With exercise, blood flow to visceral organs was reduced compared with PE values in the control rats, whereas flow to visceral organs in 15-day HU animals was unaltered by exercise. These higher flows to the viscera and to muscles composed of predominantly fast-twitch glycolytic fibers suggest an apparent reduction in the ability of the sympathetic nervous system to distribute cardiac output after chronic HU. In conclusion, because 15 days of HU did not affect blood flow to the soleus during exercise, the increased dependence of the atrophied soleus on anerobic energy production during contractile activity cannot be explained by a reduced muscle blood flow.  相似文献   

19.
Six healthy young men were studied in a high-altitude chamber during a 60-min heat exposure at a simulated altitude of 5,600 m or 0.5 atmosphere absolute (ATA). The heat load was provided by increasing the chamber temperature to 38 degrees C at the rate of 1 degree C/min after a 60-min equilibrium period at thermoneutrality (28 degrees C). Our question was whether or not hypoxia causes differential changes in regional cutaneous circulation during heat exposure. Skin blood flow in the forearm (FBF) and the finger (FiBF), temperatures of the esophagus (Tes) and of the skin, and cardiac output (CO) were measured during the heat exposure at 0.5 ATA and at the sea level (1 ATA). During the equilibrium period, hypoxia increased the mean skin temperature and mean heat transfer coefficient, as well as FBF and forearm vascular conductance. The increased blood flow in the cutaneous circulation during the hypoxic exposure may reflect cutaneous vasodilation and vasoconstriction in other regions of the body, since there was no alteration in CO and total peripheral resistance. During heat exposure, Tes rose faster at high altitude than at sea level. However, at the end of the 60-min heat exposure, all thermal as well as circulatory parameters showed no difference between the two altitudes, except for the FiBF. An attenuated vasodilation in the fingers during heat exposure at high altitude suggests differential vascular controls and possible impairment of thermoregulation when additional stress, such as heat, is imposed. The data suggest that cutaneous blood flow during heat exposure is not uniform throughout the entire skin in a hypoxic environment.  相似文献   

20.
Increasing arterial blood pressure (AP) decreases ventilation, whereas decreasing AP increases ventilation in experimental animals. To determine whether a "ventilatory baroreflex" exists in humans, we studied 12 healthy subjects aged 18-26 yr. Subjects underwent baroreflex unloading and reloading using intravenous bolus sodium nitroprusside (SNP) followed by phenylephrine ("Oxford maneuver") during the following "gas conditions:" room air, hypoxia (10% oxygen)-eucapnia, and 30% oxygen-hypercapnia to 55-60 Torr. Mean AP (MAP), heart rate (HR), cardiac output (CO), total peripheral resistance (TPR), expiratory minute ventilation (V(E)), respiratory rate (RR), and tidal volume were measured. After achieving a stable baseline for gas conditions, we performed the Oxford maneuver. V(E) increased from 8.8 ± 1.3 l/min in room air to 14.6 ± 0.8 l/min during hypoxia and to 20.1 ± 2.4 l/min during hypercapnia, primarily by increasing tidal volume. V(E) doubled during SNP. CO increased from 4.9 ± .3 l/min in room air to 6.1 ± .6 l/min during hypoxia and 6.4 ± .4 l/min during hypercapnia with decreased TPR. HR increased for hypoxia and hypercapnia. Sigmoidal ventilatory baroreflex curves of V(E) versus MAP were prepared for each subject and each gas condition. Averaged curves for a given gas condition were obtained by averaging fits over all subjects. There were no significant differences in the average fitted slopes for different gas conditions, although the operating point varied with gas conditions. We conclude that rapid baroreflex unloading during the Oxford maneuver is a potent ventilatory stimulus in healthy volunteers. Tidal volume is primarily increased. Ventilatory baroreflex sensitivity is unaffected by chemoreflex activation, although the operating point is shifted with hypoxia and hypercapnia.  相似文献   

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