INTRACRANIAL PRESSURES AND O2 EXTRACTION IN CONSCIOUS SHEEP DURING 72-H OF HYPOXIA

被引:23
作者
CURRANEVERETT, DC
IWAMOTO, J
MEREDITH, MP
KRASNEY, JA
机构
[1] SUNY BUFFALO,SCH MED,DEPT PHYSIOL,124 SHERMAN HALL,BUFFALO,NY 14214
[2] PROCTER & GAMBLE CO,STAT RESOURCES SECT,CINCINNATI,OH 45239
来源
AMERICAN JOURNAL OF PHYSIOLOGY | 1991年 / 261卷 / 01期
关键词
ACUTE MOUNTAIN SICKNESS; CEREBRAL CIRCULATION; CEREBRAL EDEMA; HYPOCAPNIA;
D O I
10.1152/ajpheart.1991.261.1.H103
中图分类号
Q4 [生理学];
学科分类号
071003 ;
摘要
High-altitude cerebral edema may occur within several days after a rapid ascent to altitude. However, the mechanisms that produce this potentially lethal condition are unclear. This experiment assessed systemic arterial and intracranial pressures (n = 22) and cerebral blood flow per unit cerebral O2 consumption (Q(c)/cVo2) and cerebral O2 extraction fraction (cEo2) (n = 9) in conscious sheep before and during 72 h of normobaric hypoxia (arterial O2 tension almost-equal-to 40 mmHg, oxygen saturation in arterial blood almost-equal-to 50%). Q(c)/cVo2 and cEo2 were calculated from systemic arterial and cerebral venous O2 contents. Wet-to-dry brain weight ratios were calculated during normoxia (n = 4) or after 72 h of hypoxia (n = 5) in additional sheep. Intracranial pressures did not change during hypoxia (+ 1.3 to + 1.8 mmHg, P = 1.0); however, estimated intracranial capillary hydrostatic pressure may have increased 1-20 mmHg depending on the arterial-to-downstream resistance ratio. During the 72 h of hypoxia, Q(c)/cVo2 doubled (P = 0.02) and cEo2 tended to decrease (5% absolute, P = 1.0). Regional wet-to-dry brain weight ratios after 72 h of hypoxia were 4-13% greater than their respective ratios during normoxia (0.001 < P less-than-or-equal-to 0.05); indirect evidence suggests that this increased brain water content was extravascular. The sheep may be an appropriate model for the further study of high-altitude cerebral edema.
引用
收藏
页码:H103 / H109
页数:7
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