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1.
The effect of hemorrhage (1.91 mL/min, 10 mL/kg) on splanchnic blood flow was determined in cats anesthetized with pentobarbital. The hepatic artery (HA) is relatively protected during hemorrhage and does not constrict, whereas the superior mesenteric artery (SMA) undergoes significant vasoconstriction. Adenosine receptor antagonism with 8-phenyltheophylline blocks the dilator response to infused adenosine selectively (does not block responses to isoproterenol). The dilator response to reduced portal blood flow (the HA buffer response) is also antagonized and adenosine receptor blockade converts the HA response to hemorrhage to one similar to that of the SMA. Thus, the protective dilation of the HA during hemorrhage is mediated by adenosine. In contrast, the vasodilation of the HA seen with reinfusion of the shed blood is not altered by adenosine receptor antagonism.  相似文献   

2.
Reduction of portal blood flow results in compensatory vasodilation of the hepatic artery, the hepatic arterial buffer response. The hypothesis tested is that the regulation of the buffer response is mediated by adenosine, where the local concentration of adenosine in the region of the hepatic arterial resistance vessels is regulated by washout of adenosine into portal venules that are in intimate contact with hepatic arterioles. In anesthetized cats, portal flow was reduced to zero by complete occlusion of all arterial supply to the guts. The resultant dilation of the hepatic artery compensated for 23.9 +/- 4.9% of the decrease in portal flow. Dose-response curves were obtained for the effect of intraportal adenosine infusion on hepatic arterial conductance in doses that did not lead to recirculation and secondary effects on the hepatic artery via altered portal blood flow. The dose to produce one-half maximal response for adenosine is 0.19 mg X kg-1 X min-1 (intraportal) and the estimated maximal dilation is equivalent to an increase in hepatic arterial conductance to 245% of the basal (100%) level. The adenosine antagonist, 8-phenyltheophylline, produced dose-related competitive antagonism of the dilator response to infused adenosine (but not to isoproterenol) and a similar, parallel antagonism of the hepatic arterial buffer response. If supramaximal blocking doses were used, the hepatic artery showed massive and prolonged constriction with blood flow decreasing to zero. The data strongly support the hypothesis that intrinsic hepatic arterial buffer response is mediated entirely by local adenosine concentration.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

3.
Insufficient cardiac preload and impaired contractility are frequent in early sepsis. We explored the effects of acute cardiac preload reduction and dobutamine on hepatic arterial (Qha) and portal venous (Qpv) blood flows during endotoxin infusion. We hypothesized that the hepatic arterial buffer response (HABR) is absent during preload reduction and reduced by dobutamine. In anesthetized pigs, endotoxin or vehicle (n = 12, each) was randomly infused for 18 h. HABR was tested sequentially by constricting superior mesenteric artery (SMA) or inferior vena cava (IVC). Afterward, dobutamine at 2.5, 5.0, and 10.0 μg/kg per minute or another vehicle (n = 6, each) was randomly administered in endotoxemic and control animals, and SMA was constricted during each dose. Systemic (cardiac output, thermodilution) and carotid, splanchnic, and renal blood flows (ultrasound Doppler) and blood pressures were measured before and during administration of each dobutamine dose. HABR was expressed as hepatic arterial pressure/flow ratio. Compared with controls, 18 h of endotoxin infusion was associated with decreased mean arterial blood pressure [49 ± 11 mmHg vs. 58 ± 8 mmHg (mean ± SD); P = 0.034], decreased renal blood flow, metabolic acidosis, and impaired HABR during SMA constriction [0.32 (0.18-1.32) mmHg/ml vs. 0.22 (0.08-0.60) mmHg/ml; P = 0.043]. IVC constriction resulted in decreased Qpv in both groups; whereas Qha remained unchanged in controls, it decreased after 18 h of endotoxemia (P = 0.031; constriction-time-group interaction). One control and four endotoxemic animals died during the subsequent 6 h. The maximal increase of cardiac output during dobutamine infusion was 47% (22-134%) in controls vs. 53% (37-85%) in endotoxemic animals. The maximal Qpv increase was significant only in controls [24% (12-47%) of baseline (P = 0.043) vs. 17% (-7-32%) in endotoxemia (P = 0.109)]. Dobutamine influenced neither Qha nor HABR. Our data suggest that acute cardiac preload reduction is associated with preferential hepatic arterial perfusion initially but not after established endotoxemia. Dobutamine had no effect on the HABR.  相似文献   

4.
The hyperaemic response of the hepatic artery to portal vein occlusion (the buffer response) and the action of exogenous adenosine upon hepatic artery blood flow was studied in Asian hybrid minipigs as a potential alternative experimental model to that previously developed in dogs. Adenosine produced a dose-dependent hepatic artery vasodilatation, but of lesser extent than that observed in dogs. A greatly diminished buffer response was observed in the pigs compared to that seen in dogs, and could not be replicated consistently. The adenosine uptake inhibitor dipyridamole did not potentiate responses to adenosine or the buffer response. It is concluded that the minipig is an unsuitable alternative model for the study of the hepatic artery buffer response.Abbreviations bw body weight - DPD dipyridamole - GDV gastroduodenal vein - HA hepatic artery - PV portal vein - PVO portal venous occlusion - PVP portal venous pressure - SE standard error  相似文献   

5.
Superior mesenteric arterial (SMA) blood flow was measured in pentobarbital-anesthetized cats using a noncannulating electromagnetic flowprobe. The selective adenosine antagonist 8-phenyltheophylline (8-PT) antagonized the dilator effect of infused adenosine but not isoproterenol. The vasodilation in response to reduced arterial perfusion pressure (autoregulation) was blocked by the adenosine receptor blockade, which also reduced the degree of postocclusive (1 min) hyperemia by one-half to two-thirds. The remainder of the hyperemia may have been due partially to adenosine, since exogenous adenosine still produced a small vasodilation (26%), so effects of endogenous adenosine could also still be expected to exert a small effect. Myogenic effects appear unlikely to be the mechanism of the small remaining hyperemia, since venous pressure increments within physiologically relevant ranges did not cause altered SMA conductance, and arterial dilation in response to large decreases in arterial pressure could be blocked by adenosine antagonism. Portal pressure was increased using hepatic nerve stimulation (8 Hz) to raise pressure from 7.0 to 12.4 mmHg (1 mmHg = 133.3 Pa). The small vasoconstriction seen in the SMA was due to the rise in systemic blood pressure, since prevention of a rise in SMA pressure prevented the response and 8-PT blocked the response (previously shown to block arterial pressure-flow autoregulation). An equal rise in PVP imposed by partial occlusion of the portal vein did not lead to changes in SMA vascular conductance. Thus, we conclude that within physiologically relevant ranges of arterial and portal venous pressure, the SMA does not show myogenic responses of the resistance vessels.  相似文献   

6.
Transrectal color Doppler sonography was used to evaluate the effect of intrauterine infusion of skim milk semen extender, seminal plasma and raw semen on the endometrium and blood flow in the uterine and ovarian arteries in mares. Six Trotter mares (mean age: 12 years) were examined during estrus in three cycles. Each mare received an intrauterine infusion of 20 ml of skim milk semen extender, seminal plasma or raw semen during estrus in one of three cycles. Blood flow measurements in both uterine and ovarian arteries and the determination of intrauterine fluid via sonography were performed before each infusion and 1, 3, 6, 12, and 24 h after infusion. Forty-eight hours later, the intrauterine infusion and measurements were repeated using the same time intervals. Changes in blood flow were detected using transrectal color Doppler sonography and were evaluated using the mean time-averaged maximum velocity (TAMV) of the blood flow. Cytological and bacteriological examination of uterine swabs performed 48 h after the second infusion revealed less inflammation and bacterial growth in mares infused with skim milk semen extender than in those infused with seminal plasma or raw semen. There was an increase in intrauterine fluid as early as 1 h after infusion of any of the substances. The infusion of skim milk semen extender had no effect on uterine blood flow. Within 1 h after infusion of seminal plasma or raw semen, there was an increase in the TAMV values of both uterine arteries (P<0.05). In contrast, ovarian blood flow increased only in the artery ipsilateral to the preovulatory follicle and only after the infusion of raw semen (P<0.05). In conclusion, the changes in uterine perfusion observed after intrauterine infusion may be associated with endometrial inflammation and vasodilatory components in the seminal plasma, whereas the changes seen in ovarian blood flow are possibly attributable to the interaction between sperm and oviduct.  相似文献   

7.
The aims of the present study were: to characterize the mechanisms of hemodynamic alterations induced by GLP-2, and, to compare the responses elicited in the superior mesenteric artery (SMA) to other vascular beds. Anesthetized rats were infused at the doses of 0.9, 2.3, 4.6 and 9.3 nmol/kg into the jugular vein for 60 min. Blood flow in the various arteries was measured by the ultrasonic transit time technique. Some animals were pretreated with indomethacin (5 mg/kg, ip), L-NAME (9, 18, 36 and 72 micromol/kg, iv), atropine sulfate (1-2 mg/kg, iv), CCK-1 and CCK-2 receptor antagonists (L-364,718 and L-365,260, 1 mg/kg, iv), exendin (9-39) amide (35 nmol/kg, iv) and lidocaine (74 micromol/kg, iv) prior to the infusion of GLP-2 (4.6 nmol/kg). In another group, capsaicin was applied either systematically (125 mg/kg, sc) or vagally (1 mg/rat). GLP-2 administration at all doses significantly increased the SMA blood flow throughout the experiments. GLP-2 (4.6 nmol/kg) infusion significantly increased blood flow of inferior mesenteric artery and carotid artery but not in any other vessel measured. Only the pretreatments with L-NAME and lidocaine were ineffective in preventing the GLP-2-induced responses. These results implicate that GLP-2-induced blood flow alterations are most significant in the SMA and are not mediated by prostaglandins, muscarinic, GLP-1 or CCK receptors. Our results also suggest that the stimulatory effect of GLP-2 on SMA blood flow is NO-dependent and mediated via intrinsic, non-cholinergic enteric neurons.  相似文献   

8.
Hyperhomocysteinemia (HHcy) has been shown to be an independent risk factor for cardiovascular diseases, superior mesenteric thrombosis and inflammatory bowel disease. Superior mesenteric artery (SMA) supplies the intestine and reduced SMA blood flow results in intestinal ischemia. Although in vitro studies have shown that endothelium-dependent vasorelaxation of SMA is reduced in the presence of homocysteine incubation, it is not confirmed with in vivo studies. In this work, we evaluated responsiveness of SMA to endothelium-dependent or -independent vasodilators and a vasoconstrictor in the absence and presence of acute HHcy in vivo to clarify effect of HHcy on superior mesenteric vascular function. Sodium nitroprusside (SNP), bradykinin (BK), and [Sar1,Thr8]angiotensin II ([Sar1,Thr8]-ANG II) were intravenously administrated in sequence in male Sprague-Dawley rats with or without D,L-homocysteine infusion (6 mg/kg/min) through femoral vein. Agonists-induced changes in carotid artery blood pressure, superior mesenteric blood flow and vascular resistance were measured in the present study. We found that acute HHcy infusion had little effects on SNP-induced hemodynamic changes; however, BK-induced changes in blood pressure, blood flow and vascular resistance were significantly reduced in the presence of HHcy infusion. Additionally, HHcy also markedly decreased [Sar1,Thr8]-ANG II-induced superior mesenteric hemodynamic changes. These results demonstrated that responsiveness of SMA to vasoconstrictor, endothelium-dependent, but not endothelium-independent vasodilator, was inhibited in the presence of Hcy infusion. This HHcy-associated vascular hyporesponsiveness to vasoconstrictors and endothelium-dependent vasodilators may partially contribute to circulatory dysfunctions.  相似文献   

9.
Effect of sotalol (STL) was compared with that of (+/-)-propranolol, (+)-propranolol (PPL), and acebutolol (ABL) on noradrenaline (NA) release as measured in coronary sinus (CS) blood during postganglionic stimulation (2 Hz, 30 s) of the left cardiac sympathetic nerves in anesthetized dogs. In control dogs receiving saline, increasing responses of CS-NA concentration, mean CS blood flow, and CS-NA output to repetitive stimulation were relatively stable throughout a given experimental period. Both STL (1,2.5, and 5 mg/kg, i.v.) and (+/-)-PPL (0.5 and 2.5 mg/kg, i.v.) diminished the increased CS-NA concentration by approximately 35 (P less than 0.05) to 60% (P less than 0.01) in a dose-dependent fashion. However, (+)-PPL (0.02-2.5 mg/kg, i.v.) and ABL (0.5-5 mg/kg, i.v.) did not significantly alter the increasing response of CS-NA concentration upon stimulation. STL, (+/-)-PPL, and ABL markedly inhibited the CS blood flow response to stimulation at all doses tested, while (+)-PPL did not significantly diminish the flow response even at the highest dose tested. Consequently, CS-NA output decreased significantly (p less than 0.01) in the presence of STL, (+/-)-PPL, and ABL at all doses tested but not with (+)-PPL at any dose tested. The inhibitory effect of STL and (+/-)-PPL on the increasing response of CS-NA concentration upon stimulation could be related to their beta-blocking effect, which exerts presumably on postulated presynaptic beta-adrenoceptors, as (+)-PPL did not at all diminish the response.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

10.
Recent studies have demonstrated that cerebral arteries from rats fed a high-salt (HS) diet exhibit impaired vasodilation and altered electrophysiological response to reduction in PO2. The present study examined whether an increase in salt intake alters the response of vascular smooth muscle cells (VSMC) to prostacyclin, a crucial mediator of hypoxic dilation in cerebral arteries. VSMC were isolated from cerebral arteries of male Sprague-Dawley rats maintained on an HS (4% NaCl) or a low-salt diet (0.4% NaCl) for 3 days. The stable prostacyclin analog iloprost (10 ng/ml) inhibited serotonin (0.1-10 microM)-induced contractions and the increase in intracellular Ca2+ concentration ([Ca2+]i) in VSMC isolated from arteries of animals fed the low-salt diet. In contrast, iloprost had no effect on serotonin-induced contractions and increases in [Ca2+]i in VSMC isolated from arteries of rats fed the HS diet. Preventing the fall in ANG in rats fed the HS diet by infusion of a low dose of ANG II (5 ng.kg(-1).min(-1) i.v.) restored the inhibitory effect of iloprost on serotonin-induced contractions and increases in [Ca2+]i in VSMC from animals fed the HS diet. These effects were reversed by AT1 receptor blockade with losartan. These results indicate that ANG II suppression secondary to elevated dietary salt intake impairs vascular relaxation and Ca2+ regulation by prostacyclin.  相似文献   

11.
Acute administration of ethanol increases portal blood flow by 40-60%. This increase in blood flow compensates for the increase in O2 consumption that follows alcohol intake and may play a protective role against hypoxic hepatocellular necrosis. We have investigated the mechanism of this hemodynamic effect of ethanol in the rat using the labeled microsphere technique. We ruled out a direct role of systemic glucagon and of acetaldehyde in mediating the increase in portal flow. However, the increase in flow is maximal at a blood ethanol concentration of 3.5 mM, corresponding to that required to achieve the Vmax of alcohol dehydrogenase, and is suppressed by 4-methylpyrazole, an inhibitor of alcohol dehydrogenase. Alcohol ingestion results in zonal liver hypoxia and in increases in acetate, both of which have been shown to increase the levels of adenosine, a potent vasodilator, in blood and tissues. Ethanol produces a 400% increase in arterial adenosine. Adenosine infusion leads to a dose-dependent increase in portal blood flow of up to 100%, an effect that is suppressed by administration of 8-phenyltheophylline, an antagonist of adenosine at A1 and A2 receptors. Similarly, the ethanol-induced increase in portal blood flow is fully suppressed by 8-phenyltheophylline. In conclusion, adenosine appears to play an important role in the mechanism by which ethanol increases portal blood flow.  相似文献   

12.
The aim of the study was to evaluate whether a selective increase in portal vein blood glucose concentration can affect pancreatic islet blood flow. Anesthetized rats were infused (0.1 ml/min for 3 min) directly into the portal vein with saline, glucose, or 3-O-methylglucose. The infused dose of glucose (1 mg. kg body wt(-1). min(-1)) was chosen so that the systemic blood glucose concentration was unaffected. Intraportal infusion of D-glucose increased insulin release and islet blood flow; the osmotic control substance 3-O-methylglucose had no such effect. A bilateral vagotomy performed 20 min before the infusions potentiated the islet blood flow response and also induced an increase in whole pancreatic blood flow, whereas the insulin response was abolished. Administration of atropine to vagotomized animals did not change the blood flow responses to intraportal glucose infusions. When the vagotomy was combined with a denervation of the hepatic artery, there was no stimulation of islet blood flow or insulin release after intraportal glucose infusion. We conclude that a selective increase in portal vein blood glucose concentration may participate in the islet blood flow increase in response to hyperglycemia. This effect is probably mediated via periarterial nerves and not through the vagus nerve. Furthermore, this blood flow increase can be dissociated from changes in insulin release.  相似文献   

13.
The purpose of this study was to determine if the renal circulation of normal and cirrhotic dogs behave similarly in response to an acute endotoxin infusion. Endotoxin was administered as a slow continuous infusion (13-26 micrograms/min) to a total of 20 normal dogs through the femoral vein, portal vein, or into the left renal artery. In each case, there was an initial increment in renal blood flow, of the order of 46%, while arterial blood pressure was actually declining. After 8-20 min, blood flow fell as perfusion pressure declined further. The initial increment in renal perfusion was not due to a hyperthermic response following the endotoxin. When similar doses were given to five dogs with chronic biliary cirrhosis and ascites, the biphasic response in renal perfusion was not observed, rather blood flow declined as perfusion pressure declined. When normal dogs were infused with bilirubin, bile salts, noradrenaline, and angiotensin in pressor doses, the subsequent infusion of endotoxin still produced the usual biphasic response in renal perfusion. Chronic elevation of portal pressure (but not acute elevation), volume contraction by diuresis or hemorrhage, and the infusion of bile intravenously, all abolished the biphasic response in renal perfusion and reproduced in normal dogs the response to endotoxin observed in cirrhotic dogs. Investigation of the factors causing the initial decrease in intrarenal vascular resistance in normal dogs following the endotoxin infusion implicated a role for histamine, kinins, and prostaglandins. We conclude there is a fundamental difference in the response of the renal circulation of normal and cirrhotic dogs to an endotoxin infusion, which may depend on failure of this latter group to release one or more humoral agents. This difference may be due to elevated portal pressure, a decreased effective arterial blood volume, or the products of bile having access to the circulation in cirrhotic dogs.  相似文献   

14.
The study was carried out to determine whether the diminished release of norepinephrine (NE) upon sympathetic activation in the presence of sotalol can be attributed to the blockade of beta-adrenoceptors in the liver. NE release from the liver was measured in hepatic venous blood collected during direct hepatic nerve stimulation in anesthetized dogs. The mean basal NE concentration in hepatic venous and aortic blood was 0.046 +/- 0.003 and 0.244 +/- 0.041 ng/mL, respectively. NE release increased significantly as stimulation frequency increased, while aortic NE concentration remained unchanged. The increasing response of NE release upon stimulation in the vehicle control group remained stable during the whole experimental period. In dogs treated with sotalol (5 mg/kg, i.v.), NE release was reduced approximately by 30-43%, and the difference was statistically significant (P less than 0.01) at 8 Hz. (+/-)-Propranolol (2.5 mg/kg, i.v.) tended to diminish it, but the difference was not significant. (-)-Propranolol (0.1 mg/kg, i.v.) did not alter NE release at any frequency tested. The beta-blocking action of these drugs in the liver, as determined by the antagonism against the hepatic arterial vasodilating response to isoproterenol, was most effective with (+/-)-propranolol (100%), followed by (-)-propranolol (90%) and sotalol (70%). The results suggest that the inhibitory effect of sotalol on NE release may be related to a mechanism other than its beta-blocking action in the dog liver.  相似文献   

15.
The effect of prostaglandin synthesis inhibition and of beta-adrenoceptor blockade on the blood pressure and renin response to the synthetic atrial natriuretic peptide atriopeptin III was assessed in unanesthetized normotensive rats. This peptide was infused i.v. for 30 min at a rate of 1 microgram/min in rats pretreated either with indomethacin (5 mg i.v.) or propranolol (1 mg i.v.). The blood pressure reducing effect of atriopeptin III was attenuated neither by indomethacin nor by propranolol. Atriopeptin III per se did not modify plasma renin activity. Both the administration of indomethacin and of propranolol had a suppressing effect on renin release during atriopeptin III infusion. These data suggest that the vasodilating properties of atrial natriuretic peptides do not depend in the conscious normotensive rats on the production of prostaglandins. They also provide evidence that during infusion of such peptides, both prostaglandins and beta-adrenergic mechanisms are still involved in the regulation of renin secretion.  相似文献   

16.
The hepatic arterial buffer response (HABR) effectively controls total blood perfusion in normal livers, but little is known about blood flow regulation in cirrhosis. We therefore studied the impact of HABR on blood perfusion of cirrhotic livers in vivo. After 8-wk CCl(4) treatment to induce cirrhosis, 18 anesthetized rats (and 18 noncirrhotic controls) were used to simultaneously assess portal venous and hepatic arterial inflow with miniaturized ultrasonic flow probes. Stepwise hepatic arterial blood flow (HAF) or portal venous blood flow (PVF) reduction was performed. Cirrhotic livers revealed a significantly reduced total hepatic blood flow (12.3 +/- 0.9 ml/min) due to markedly diminished PVF (7.3 +/- 0.8 ml/min) but slightly increased HAF (5.0 +/- 0.6 ml/min) compared with noncirrhotic controls (19.0 +/- 1.6, 15.2 +/- 1.3, and 3.8 +/- 0.4 ml/min). PVF reduction caused a significant HABR, i.e., increase of HAF, in both normal and cirrhotic livers; however, buffer capacity of cirrhotic livers exceeded that of normal livers (P < 0.05) by 1. 7- to 4.5-fold (PVF 80% and 20% of baseline). Persistent PVF reduction for 1, 2, and 6 h demonstrated constant HABR in both groups. Furthermore, HABR could be repetitively provoked, as analyzed by intermittent PVF reduction. HAF reduction did not induce changes of portal flow in either group. Because PVF is reduced in cirrhosis, the maintenance of HAF and the preserved HABR must be considered as a protective effect on overall hepatic circulation, counteracting impaired nutritive blood supply via the portal vein.  相似文献   

17.
The effect of acetylcholine on regional coronary blood flow and myocardial O2 consumption was determined in order to compare its direct vasodilatory effects with the metabolic vasoconstriction it induces. Experiments were conducted in seven untreated control anaesthetized open chest rabbits and seven rabbits which were infused with acetylcholine (1 microgram/kg/min). Myocardial blood flow was determined before and during acetylcholine infusion using radioactive microspheres. Regional arterial and venous O2 saturation was analyzed microspectrophotometrically. Acetylcholine reduced heart rate by 30% and significantly depressed the arterial systolic and diastolic blood pressure. The mean O2 consumption was significantly reduced with acetylcholine from 9.6 +/- 2.0 to 6.1 +/- 3.6 ml O2/min/100 g. Coronary blood flow decreased uniformly across the left ventricular wall by about 50% and resistance to flow increased by 42% despite potential direct cholinergic vasodilation. O2 extraction was not affected by acetylcholine infusion. It is concluded that the acetylcholine infusion directly decreased myocardial O2 consumption, which in turn lowered the coronary blood flow and increased the resistance. The decreased flow was related to a reduced metabolic demand rather than a direct result of lowered blood pressure. Unaffected myocardial O2 extraction also suggested that blood flow and metabolism were matched. This indicates that direct cholinergic vasodilation of the coronary vasculature does not allow a greater reduction in metabolism than flow in the anaesthetized open chest rabbit heart during acetylcholine infusion.  相似文献   

18.
Transposing a rat from the home cage to a new cage produces a cardiovascular response (transposition response) characterized by an increase in hindquarter blood flow with unchanged systemic arterial pressure. Arterial blood samples were collected from rats before and during this response for radioenzymatic assay of catecholamines. During the transposition response, the concentration of adrenaline and noradrenaline in plasma increased about six- and two-fold, respectively. Ablation of the adrenal medulla prevented these changes in plasma catecholamine concentration. Constant i.v. infusion of adrenaline, at rates producing a hindquarter flow approximately matching that observed during the transposition response, evoked an increase in plasma adrenaline concentration also approximately matching the increase observed during the transposition response. It is concluded that the increase in plasma adrenaline secreted from the adrenal medulla is the main cause of the increase in hindquarter blood flow in the transposition response.  相似文献   

19.
The liver function may be degraded after partial liver ablation surgery. Adverse liver hemodynamics have been shown to be associated to liver failure. The link between these hemodynamics changes and ablation size is however poorly understood. This article proposes to explain with a closed-loop lumped model the hemodynamics changes observed during twelve surgeries in pigs. The portal venous tree is modeled with a pressure-dependent variable resistor. The variables measured, before liver ablation, are used to tune the model parameters. Then, the liver partial ablation is simulated with the model and the simulated pressures and flows are compared with post-operative measurements. Fluid infusion and blood losses occur during the surgery. The closed-loop model presented accounts for these blood volume changes. Moreover, the impact of blood volume changes and the liver lobe mass estimations on the simulated variables is studied. The typical increase of portal pressure, increase of liver pressure loss, slight decrease of portal flow and major decrease in arterial flow are quantitatively captured by the model for a 75% hepatectomy. It appears that the 75% decrease in hepatic arterial flow can be explained by the resistance increase induced by the surgery, and that no hepatic arterial buffer response (HABR) mechanism is needed to account for this change. The different post-operative states, observed in experiments, are reproduced with the proposed model. Thus, an explanation for inter-subjects post-operative variability is proposed. The presented framework can easily be adapted to other species circulations and to different pathologies for clinical hepatic applications.  相似文献   

20.
We have studied the effects of pancreastatin on insulin and glucagon secretions in vivo in the conscious rat. Rats were prepared with a gastric fistula and with both external jugular veins cannulated. We found that an i.v. infusion of pancreastatin (1 and 10 nmol/kg/h) inhibited the plasma insulin response and increased the plasma glucose response to the intragastric infusion of glucose in a dose-dependent manner. Furthermore, the infusion of pancreastatin increased the plasma glucagon response to the i.v. infusion of arginine in a dose-dependent manner, and it inhibited the plasma insulin response. However, such an infusion of pancreastatin had no effect on the basal plasma glucose level, nor did it have any effect on plasma insulin and glucagon concentrations. Thus, it is suggested that in the rat, the newly discovered pancreastatin is a regulator of islet cell function.  相似文献   

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