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Oxygen tension in rat cerebral cortex microvessels in acute anemia
Authors:E. P. Vovenko  A. E. Chuikin
Affiliation:Tissue Gas Exchange Physiology Group, I. P. Pavlov Institute of Physiology, Russian Academy of Sciences, 6 Makarov Bank, St. Petersburg, Russia. epv@infran.ru
Abstract:
Polarigraphic microelectrodes were used to study the distribution of oxygen tension (pO(2)) in arterioles (lumen diameters 8-80 microm) and venules (lumen diameters 8-120 microm) in the rat cerebral cortex during acute reductions in blood hemoglobin ([Hb]). Isovolumic hemodilution with 5% albumin solution was performed in steps from an initial [Hb] of 14.1 +/- 0.3 g/dl (control) to 9.8 +/- 0.3 g/dl (step 1), 6.6 +/- 0.4 g/dl (step 2), and 4.6 +/- 0.3 g/dl (step 3). Mild anemia (step 1, hematocrit 30%) led to an increase in pO(2) in the arterial side of the microcirculatory bed, with virtually no change in pO(2) in the venous side. Step 2 (hematocrit 20%) was accompanied by a further insignificant increase in pO(2) in arterioles, while there was a significant reduction (on average to 32 mmHg) in venules. Step 3 (hematocrit 13-14%) led to a (statistically insignificant) increase in pO(2) in arterioles. pO(2) in venules decreased, on average, to 27 mmHg; the proportion of smallest venules with low pO(2) values (less than 20 mmHg) increased to 31% (from 3% in controls). In some capillaries, pO(2) was 5-10 mmHg, which was an indicator of the presence of hypoxic zones in brain tissues. These zones primarily arose close to the smallest capillary and venous microvessels, with slowed or impaired blood flow.
Keywords:oxygen tension  anemia  hypoxia  arterioles  venules  isovolumic hemodilution  pO2   pO2 gradients  oxygen microelectrodes
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