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Am. J. Physiol. Heart Circ. Physiol. · Jul 2006
Is oxygen supply a limiting factor for survival during rewarming from profound hypothermia?
- Timofei V Kondratiev, Kristina Flemming, Eivind S P Myhre, Mikhail A Sovershaev, and Torkjel Tveita.
- Department of Anesthesiology, Institute of Clinical Medicine, University of Tromsø, Tromsø, Norway. timoteik@fagmed.uit.no
- Am. J. Physiol. Heart Circ. Physiol. 2006 Jul 1;291(1):H441-50.
AbstractIt has been postulated that unsuccessful resuscitation of victims of accidental hypothermia is caused by insufficient tissue oxygenation. The aim of this study was to test whether inadequate O2 supply and/or malfunctioning O2 extraction occur during rewarming from deep/profound hypothermia of different duration. Three groups of rats (n = 7 each) were used: group 1 served as normothermic control for 5 h; groups 2 and 3 were core cooled to 15 degrees C, kept at 15 degrees C for 1 and 5 h, respectively, and then rewarmed. In both hypothermic groups, cardiac output (CO) decreased spontaneously by > 50% in response to cooling. O2 consumption fell to less than one-third during cooling but recovered completely in both groups during rewarming. During hypothermia, circulating blood volume in both groups was reduced to approximately one-third of baseline, indicating that some vascular beds were critically perfused during hypothermia. CO recovered completely in animals rewarmed after 1 h (group 2) but recovered to only 60% in those rewarmed after 5 h (group 3), whereas blood volume increased to approximately three-fourths of baseline in both groups. Metabolic acidosis was observed only after 5 h of hypothermia (15 degrees C). A significant increase in myocardial tissue heat shock protein 70 after rewarming in group 3, but not in group 2, indicates an association with the duration of hypothermia. Thus mechanisms facilitating O2 extraction function well during deep/profound hypothermia, and, despite low CO, O2 supply was not a limiting factor for survival in the present experiments.
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