• Am. J. Physiol. Lung Cell Mol. Physiol. · Nov 2006

    Therapeutic hypercapnia prevents chronic hypoxia-induced pulmonary hypertension in the newborn rat.

    • Crystal Kantores, Patrick J McNamara, Lilian Teixeira, Doreen Engelberts, Prashanth Murthy, Brian P Kavanagh, and Robert P Jankov.
    • Clinical Integrative Biology, Sunnybrook Research Institute, The Hospital for Sick Children Research Institute, Toronto, Ontario, Canada.
    • Am. J. Physiol. Lung Cell Mol. Physiol. 2006 Nov 1;291(5):L912-22.

    AbstractInduction of hypercapnia by breathing high concentrations of carbon dioxide (CO(2)) may have beneficial effects on the pulmonary circulation. We tested the hypothesis that exposure to CO(2) would protect against chronic pulmonary hypertension in newborn rats. Atmospheric CO(2) was maintained at <0.5% (normocapnia), 5.5%, or 10% during exposure from birth for 14 days to normoxia (21% O(2)) or moderate hypoxia (13% O(2)). Pulmonary vascular and hemodynamic abnormalities in animals exposed to chronic hypoxia included increased pulmonary arterial resistance, right ventricular hypertrophy and dysfunction, medial thickening of pulmonary resistance arteries, and distal arterial muscularization. Exposure to 10% CO(2) (but not to 5.5% CO(2)) significantly attenuated pulmonary vascular remodeling and increased pulmonary arterial resistance in hypoxia-exposed animals (P < 0.05), whereas both concentrations of CO(2) normalized right ventricular performance. Exposure to 10% CO(2) attenuated increased oxidant stress induced by hypoxia, as quantified by 8-isoprostane content in the lung, and prevented upregulation of endothelin-1, a critical mediator of pulmonary vascular remodeling. We conclude that hypercapnic acidosis has beneficial effects on pulmonary hypertension and vascular remodeling induced by chronic hypoxia, which we speculate derives from antioxidant properties of CO(2) on the lung and consequent modulating effects on the endothelin pathway.

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