Acute local decreases in oxygen (7-2%) and increases in carbon dioxide (5-10%) provoked rapid, independent, and additive increases in capillary red blood cell velocity in rat skeletal muscle.
Acute local changes in oxygen and carbon dioxide concentrations provoke independent and additive capillary hemodynamic responses in skeletal muscle.
Tasa de eventos absoluta: 235.74% vs 228.53%
valor p: p=<0.0003
Objectives: We aimed to quantify the magnitude and time transients of capillary blood flow responses to acute changes in local oxygen concentration (O 2 ), and carbon dioxide concentration (CO 2 ) in skeletal muscle. Additionally, we sought to quantify the combined response to both low O 2 and high CO 2 to mimic muscle microenvironment changes at the onset of exercise. Methods: 13 Sprague Dawley rats were anaesthetized, mechanically ventilated, and instrumented with indwelling catheters for systemic monitoring. The extensor digitorum longus muscle was blunt dissected, and reflected over a microfluidic gas exchange chamber in the stage of an inverted microscope. Four O 2 challenges, four CO 2 challenges, and a combined low O 2 (7–2%) and high CO 2 (5–10%) challenges were delivered to the surface with simultaneous visualization of capillary blood flow responses. Recordings were made for each challenge over a 1-min baseline period followed by a 2-min step change. The combined challenge employed a 1-min O 2 challenge followed by a 2-min change in CO 2 . Mean data for each sequence were fit using least-squared non-linear exponential models to determine the dynamics of each response. Results: 7–2% O 2 challenges decreased capillary RBC saturation within 2 s following the step change (46.53 ± 19.56% vs. 48.51 ± 19.02%, p 0.0001, τ = 1.44 s), increased RBC velocity within 3 s (228.53 ± 190.39 μm/s vs. 235.74 ± 193.52 μm/s, p 0.0003, τ = 35.54 s) with a 52% peak increase by the end of the challenge, hematocrit and supply rate show similar dynamics. 5–10% CO 2 challenges increased RBC velocity within 2 s following the step change (273.40 ± 218.06 μm/s vs. 276.75 ± 215.94 μm/s, p = 0.007, τ = 79.34s), with a 58% peak increase by the end of the challenge, supply rate and hematocrit show similar dynamics. Combined O 2 and CO 2 challenges resulted in additive responses to all microvascular hemodynamic measures with a 103% peak velocity increase by the end of the collection period. Data for mean responses and exponential fitting parameters are reported for all challenges. Conclusion: Microvascular level changes in muscle O 2 and CO 2 provoked capillary hemodynamic responses with differing time transients. Simulating exercise via combined O 2 and CO 2 challenges demonstrated the independent and additive nature of local blood flow responses to these agents.
McEvoy et al. (Tue,) conducted a other in Healthy (animal model) (n=13). Acute local changes in oxygen and carbon dioxide concentrations vs. Baseline gas concentrations was evaluated on Capillary red blood cell velocity within 3 seconds of 7-2% O2 step change (p=<0.0003). Acute local decreases in oxygen (7-2%) and increases in carbon dioxide (5-10%) provoked rapid, independent, and additive increases in capillary red blood cell velocity in rat skeletal muscle.
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