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Am J Physiol 209: 397-403, 1965;
0002-9513/65 $5.00
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Mechanism of circulatory responses to systemic hypoxia in the anesthetized dog

Hermes A. Kontos 1, H. Page Mauck JR. 1, David W. Richardson 1, and John L. Patterson JR. 1

1 Department of Medicine, Medical College of Virginia, Richmond, Virginia

The possibility that mechanisms secondary to the increased ventilation may contribute significantly to the circulatory responses to systemic hypoxia was explored in anesthetized dogs. In 14 spontaneously breathing dogs systemic hypoxia induced by breathing 7.5% oxygen in nitrogen increased cardiac output, heart rate, mean arterial blood pressure, and femoral arterial flow, and decreased systemic and hindlimb vascular resistances. In 14 dogs whose ventilation was kept constant by means of a respirator pump and intravenous decamethonium, systemic hypoxia did not change cardiac output, femoral arterial flow, or limb vascular resistance; it significantly decreased heart rate and significantly increased systemic vascular resistance. In seven spontaneously breathing dogs arterial blood pCO2 was maintained at the resting level during systemic hypoxia. The increase in heart rate was significantly less pronounced but the other circulatory findings were not different from those found during hypocapnic hypoxia. Thus, mechanisms secondary to increased ventilation contribute significantly to the circulatory responses to systemic hypoxia. Hypocapnia accounts partly for the increased heart rate, but not for the other circulatory responses.

Key Words: effects of hypoxia on cardiac output • effects of hypoxia on limb blood flow • vasodilatation • circulatory effects of skeletal muscle • paralyzing drugs

Submitted on February 10, 1965




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[Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF]




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