Respiration physiology
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Isolated rabbit lungs were buffer-perfused under constant flow-conditions with separate control of alveolar (PAO2) and mixed venous (PvO2) O2 tension. Alveolar hypoxia caused an increase in pulmonary artery pressure (PAP) with sigmoidal dose-dependency. Erythrocytes increased the strength of the hypoxic pulmonary vasoconstriction (HPV). ⋯ In contrast, changes in PvO2, both in the absence and presence of erythrocytes, did neither provoke any pressor response nor amplify the response to concomitant alveolar hypoxia. Repeatedly performed HPV manoeuvres revealed excellent reproducibility, and long-term alveolar hypoxia (90 min) provoked a biphasic pressor response. We conclude that the isolated rabbit lung is a feasible model for the characterization of hypoxic vasoconstriction, with specific features hitherto not described for perfused lungs of other species.