Journal of applied physiology
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To investigate the relationship between hypoxic pulmonary vasoconstriction and respiratory and metabolic acidosis and respiratory alkalosis, the pulmonary gas exchange and pulmonary hemodynamic responses were measured in anesthetized, paralyzed, and mechanically ventilated dogs in two sets of experiments (series A, n = 6; series B, n = 10). The animals were treated with acute hypoxia, CO2 inhalation, hyperventilation, and dinitrophenol in various combinations. Multiple regression analysis indicated that mean pulmonary arterial pressure (Ppa) was significantly correlated with end-tidal PO2, mixed venous PO2, and the mean pulmonary capillary pH (average of arterial and mixed venous pH) as independent variables [series A: r = +0.999, standard error of estimate (SEE) = 0.4 mmHg; series B: r = +0.98, SEE = 1.4 mmHg]. ⋯ Furthermore, ventilation-perfusion inhomogeneity, as estimated in the dogs from end-tidal and arterial O2 and CO2 differences and assuming no true shunt or diffusion impairment, was highly correlated with Ppa and mean pulmonary capillary pH (r = +0.999 in series A, r = +0.77 in series B). The human data from the above studies also showed significant correlations between Ppa and directly measured ventilation-perfusion (standard deviation of perfusion obtained from inert gas measurements). These observations indicate that the beneficial effects of hyperventilation during hypoxia may be related to the marked alkalosis that serves to reduce Ppa and improve pulmonary gas exchange efficiency.
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To determine if prophylactic corticosteroids would prevent acute lung injury caused by hyperoxia and barotrauma, 29 piglets (1.2 +/- 0.3 kg, 1-2 days of age) were studied. Ten piglets were hyperventilated [arterial PCO2 (PaCO2) 15-20 Torr] with 100% O2 for 48 h and compared with 10 piglets treated with the identical management but given 0.7 mg/kg of dexamethasone at time 0 and every 12 h for the 48-h study. Six piglets were normally ventilated (PaCO2 40-45 Torr) for 48 h with 21% O2 as an additional control group. ⋯ Room air normal ventilation controls had only a 108% increase in tracheal aspirate albumin concentration noted. Despite quantitative differences in surfactant among the three groups, activity was unaffected. Results indicate that hyperoxia and hyperventilation for 48 h causes significant inflammatory changes and acute lung injury and that prophylactic high-dose dexamethasone significantly ameliorates this lung damage.
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In a recent study by Tsukimoto et al. (J. Appl. Physiol. 68: 2488-2493, 1990), CO2 inhalation appeared to reduce the size of the high ventilation-perfusion ratio (VA/Q) mode commonly observed in anesthetized mechanically air-ventilated dogs. ⋯ Unexpectedly, the size of the high VA/Q mode decreased similarly in both groups over time, independently of the inspired PCO2, at a rate similar to the fall in cardiac output over time. The reduction in the high VA/Q mode together with a simultaneous increase in alveolar dead space (estimated by the difference between inert gas dead space and Fowler dead space) suggests that poorly perfused high VA/Q areas became unperfused over time. A possible mechanism is that elevated alveolar pressure and decreased cardiac output eliminate blood flow from corner vessels in nondependent high VA/Q regions.
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Mechanisms underlying failure of autoresuscitation from hypoxic apnea were investigated. Failure was induced by repeated exposure to hypoxia. The influence of maturation was studied in adults, weanlings, and 10- and 5-day-old mice. ⋯ In addition, heart block occurred with increasing frequency on later successful trials, but conversion to sinus rhythm always preceded successful autoresuscitation. Heart block was also frequent in SWR mice and had similar consequences. BALB/c mice exposed to continuous anoxia survived longer than SWR mice, indicating increased endurance of components of the autoresuscitation mechanism not directly related to the ventilatory function of gasping (e.g., cardiovascular components).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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The effect of severe generalized edema on respiratory system mechanics is not well described. We measured airway pressure, gastric pressure, and four vertical pleural pressures in 13 anesthetized paralyzed pigs ventilated in the upright position. Pressure-volume relationships of the respiratory system, chest wall, and lung were measured on deflation from total lung capacity to residual volume and during tidal breathing both before (control) and 50 min after one of two interventions. ⋯ Tidal compliances of the respiratory system, chest wall, and lung decreased 36, 31, and 49%, respectively (all P less than 0.05). The effect of abdominal balloon inflation on respiratory system mechanics was similar to that of volume infusion. We conclude that infusing large volumes of fluid markedly alters chest wall mechanics, mainly by causing abdominal distension that prohibits descent of the diaphragm.