scholarly journals Effects of Exercise and Plane of Nutrition on Nutrient Utilization by the Hind Limb of the Sheep

1981 ◽  
Vol 34 (6) ◽  
pp. 541 ◽  
Author(s):  
AR Bird ◽  
KD Chandler ◽  
AW Bell

Net uptake, by the hind limb, of oxygen and a number of energy substrates was measured in sheep fed semicontinuously at maintenance or 1�5 times maintenance, while standing at rest or walking on a moving-belt treadmill at 0�7 ms- 1, on a 10� slope for 60 min. Exercise caused a six- to sevenfold increase in hind-limb oxygen uptake, due mainly to increased blood flow, assisted by an increase in the oxygen-carrying capacity of arterial blood. Major changes in nutrient supply and utilization included hyperglycaemia, hyperlactacidaemia, free fatty acid (FFA) mobilization, and substantially increased uptakes of glucose and FFA by the hind limb. Acetate uptake was unchanged during exercise in maintenance-fed sheep, but was significantly increased in sheep fed at levels above maintenance. Plane of nutrition had little effect on hind-limb uptake of other nutrients in resting or exercising animals.

Blood ◽  
1948 ◽  
Vol 3 (4) ◽  
pp. 329-348 ◽  
Author(s):  
HERRMAN L. BLUMGART ◽  
MARK D. ALTSCHULE

Abstract The cardiac and respiratory adjustments in chronic anemia and their clinical manifestations have been reviewed. When the oxygen carrying capacity of the blood is diminished, an adequate supply of oxygen to the tissues is maintained by an increased cardiac output, an increased velocity of blood flow, and a relatively more complete abstraction of the oxygen from the blood as it passes through the capillaries. With the increased blood flow, the average peripheral resistance is decreased but the state of the small blood vessels is not uniform everywhere; the blood flow in the hands and kidneys, for instance, may be reduced, while that of other parts of the body is increased. The total oxygen consumption of the body in anemia is not strikingly altered. The blood volume generally is slightly reduced but the plasma volume is normal. The deviations from the normal values vary from patient to patient, but generally are definite when the hemoglobin values are less than 50 per cent and are greatest at the lowest levels of hemoglobin concentration. The close interrelationship between the cardiovascular and respiratory systems is exemplified by the coincident changes in the respiratory system in anemia. The rate and depth of respiration often are increased together with a lowering in the vital capacity and its subdivisions, the reserve and complemental air volumes. The resid- ual air is somewhat increased. These deviations from the normal are similar to those observed in pulmonary congestion or edema and denote a loss of elasticity and expansibility favoring the occurrence of exertional dyspnea. The arterial blood saturation is usually normal at rest but, during exertion, a significant lowering becomes apparent. The importance of hemoglobin in the transport of carbon dioxide is reviewed; the decreased availability of hemoglobin as a buffer in carbon dioxide transport in anemia is compensated by the increased ventilation of the blood in the lungs, rendering the arterial blood somewhat alkalotic. The red cells also play an important role in regard to the respiratory enzyme, carbonic anhydrase. In the anemias due to blood loss, malnutrition, chronic infection, uremia, or leukemia, the blood carbonic anhydrase activity is parallel to the decrease in hemoglobin level leading to a deficiency not only of oxygen carrying capacity but also a decreased ability to absorb carbon dioxide from the tissues and to release it in the lungs. The following factors, many of which are closely interrelated, are operative in the production of dyspnea in anemic patients: the increased respiratory minute volume, the decreased vital capacity and its subdivisions, the abnormalities in carbon dioxide transport and dissociation, the reduced arterial oxygen capacity and the decreased blood oxygen saturation during effort, and the frequently observed elevated blood lactic acid values. The symptoms and signs exhibited by anemic patients, including palpitation and breathlessness on exertion, tachycardia, cardiac dilatation and hypertrophy, are described. In addition to an apical systolic murmur, other systolic and diastolic murmurs are occasionally heard. The arterial blood pressure is frequently lowered in anemia; the venous pressure is generally within the limits of normal. Electrocardiographic abnormalities occur in approximately one-quarter of anemic patients but are minor and not specific in character. The occurrence of angina pectoris, congestive failure, and intermittent claudication in some patients with the development of anemia, and disappearance of these conditions as the anemia is alleviated, is discussed with particular reference to the underlying physiologic mechanisms.


2006 ◽  
Vol 100 (2) ◽  
pp. 725-730 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kui Xu ◽  
Joseph C. LaManna

Exposure to mild hypoxia elicits a characteristic cerebrovascular response in mammals, including humans. Initially, cerebral blood flow (CBF) increases as much as twofold. The blood flow increase is blunted somewhat by a decreasing arterial Pco2 as a result of the hypoxia-induced hyperventilatory response. After a few days, CBF begins to fall back toward baseline levels as the blood oxygen-carrying capacity is increasing due to increasing hemoglobin concentration and packed red cell volume as a result of erythropoietin upregulation. By the end of 2 wk of hypoxic exposure, brain capillary density has increased with resultant decreased intercapillary distances. The relative time courses of these changes suggest that they are adjusted by different control signals and mechanisms. The CBF response appears linked to the blood oxygen-carrying capacity, whereas the hypoxia-induced brain angiogenesis appears to be in response to tissue hypoxia.


1988 ◽  
Vol 33 (4) ◽  
pp. 298-299 ◽  
Author(s):  
A.R. Turner ◽  
G.D.O. Lowe ◽  
C.D. Forbes ◽  
J. G. Pollock

Patients with intermittent claudication frequently have high-normal levels of haematocrit and hence blood viscosity, which may contribute to decreased calf blood flow on exercise, and hence to the symptom of claudication. Reduction in haematocrit and viscosity by serial venesection in eight patients with stable claudication and high-normal haematocrit (mean 0.50) was performed, and the effects on claudication, calf blood flow, and calf oxygen delivery were studied. Following reduction in haematocrit to low-normal levels (mean 0.44), resting calf blood flow was unchanged; peak flow after ischaemic exercise increased slightly (+17%), but peak oxygen delivery (peak flow × haemoglobin concentration) was unchanged. Hence any increase in calf blood flow in the symptomatic leg is balanced by a decrease in oxygen-carrying capacity after venesection. No increase in claudication time would therefore be expected, and none was observed in the present study.


1992 ◽  
Vol 13 (10) ◽  
pp. 379-380
Author(s):  
William B. Strong

What is the likely pathophysiology of this event? What are the more common complications of hypoxemia in the older infant and young child? This clinical scenario is uncommon, but it represents one of the two feared central nervous system complications of cyanotic congenital heart disease, (ie, cerebrovascular accident and brain abscess). A uniform response to hypoxemia of cardiac etiology is the production of erythropoietin to produce more red blood cells. This is a compensatory mechanism to maintain oxygen delivery to the peripheral tissues. Normally, hemoglobin is about 96% saturated with oxygen. Therefore, the oxygen-carrying capacity of blood with a normal hemoglobin concentration of 15 g/dL is approximately 20.3 mL of oxygen per 100 mL of blood (ie, 15 g of hemoglobin x 1.35 mL of O2 per g of hemoglobin = 20.3). The oxygen content of blood equals the oxygen-carrying capacity multiplied by the oxygen saturation. At a normal oxygen saturation of 96%, the O2 content of arterial blood (Hgb 15 g/dL) equals 19.5 mL/dL (96% x 20.3 mm3/dL) or 195 mL per liter of cardiac output. The arterial O2 content of this child, assuming an average arterial saturation of 85%, will be 11.1 mL/dL. Therefore, every liter (10 dL) of cardiac output will carry 111 mL of O2 or 84 mL of O2 less than the child with a 15 g/dL hemoglobin level.


1985 ◽  
Vol 59 (5) ◽  
pp. 1369-1375 ◽  
Author(s):  
L. Aanderud ◽  
J. Onarheim ◽  
I. Tyssebotn

Cardiac output and organ blood flow to major organs were investigated in awake rats at 1 atmosphere absolute (ATA) air and at 71 ATA He-O2. Radioactively labeled microspheres [15 +/- 1 (SD) micron] were injected into the left ventricle during constant-rate arterial blood sampling at 1 ATA air and subsequently at 71 ATA He-O2. Intra-arterial blood pressure was continuously recorded. The partial pressure of O2 was kept between 0.4 and 0.6 ATA. The results indicate that the mean blood pressure, heart rate, cardiac output, and organ blood flow are essentially unaltered in the rat at 71 ATA except for increased blood flow to the liver (122%, P less than 0.05), whereas the blood flow to the adrenals, the diaphragm, and the leg muscle fell (P less than 0.05).


2015 ◽  
Vol 118 (5) ◽  
pp. 586-594 ◽  
Author(s):  
David J. Doolette ◽  
Richard N. Upton ◽  
Cliff Grant

In underwater diving, decompression schedules are based on compartmental models of nitrogen and helium tissue kinetics. However, these models are not based on direct measurements of nitrogen and helium kinetics. In isoflurane-anesthetized sheep, nitrogen and helium kinetics in the hind limb ( n = 5) and brain ( n = 5) were determined during helium-oxygen breathing and after return to nitrogen-oxygen breathing. Nitrogen and helium concentrations in arterial, femoral vein, and sagittal sinus blood samples were determined using headspace gas chromatography, and venous blood flows were monitored continuously using ultrasonic Doppler. The experiment was repeated at different states of hind limb blood flow and cerebral blood flow. Using arterial blood gas concentrations and blood flows as input, parameters and model selection criteria of various compartmental models of hind limb and brain were estimated by fitting to the observed venous gas concentrations. In both the hind limb and brain, nitrogen and helium kinetics were best fit by models with multiexponential kinetics. In the brain, there were no differences in nitrogen and helium kinetics. Hind limb models fit separately to the two gases indicated that nitrogen kinetics were slightly faster than helium, but models with the same kinetics for both gases fit the data well. In the hind limb and brain, the blood:tissue exchange of nitrogen is similar to that of helium. On the basis of these results, it is inappropriate to assign substantially different time constants for nitrogen and helium in all compartments in decompression algorithms.


1977 ◽  
Vol 43 (5) ◽  
pp. 784-789 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. F. Borgia ◽  
S. M. Horvath

Intact anesthetized dogs were exposed for 75 min to either 5.75, 9.0, or 12.0% oxygen in nitrogen. Although pulmonary artery pressures were significantly elevated in all hypoxic exposures, systemic hypertension occurred only at the onset of severe hypoxia(5.75% O2). Coronary blood flow increased from an average of 130 during normoxia to a peak of 400 ml/100 g per min during inhalation of 5.75% O2, and coronary sinus oxygen tensions of 8 Torr and oxygen contents of 1.1 ml/100 ml were sustained for 75 min without biochemical, functional, or electrophysiological evidence of myocardial ischemia. Cardiac index (CI) increased significantly only during severe hypoxia (5.75% O2) with the greatest elevation after 30 min. Subsequently, CI decreased concomitantly with a 27% elevation in arterial hemoglobin concentration and oxygen-carrying capacity. It is concluded that the hypoxic threshold for significant elevations of cardiac output is between 6.0 and 9.0% O2.


1971 ◽  
Vol 50 (6) ◽  
pp. 1531-1535 ◽  
Author(s):  
Frank D. Sticht ◽  
Roy M. Smith

Eugenol introduced directly into the circulatory system of the dog caused a strong but transient reduction in arterial blood pressure and myocardial contractile force, without appreciably changing heart rate or electric activity. Intra-arterial injection of the drug resulted in increased blood flow to the region.


1997 ◽  
Vol 272 (5) ◽  
pp. H2492-H2499 ◽  
Author(s):  
W. T. Phillips ◽  
L. Lemen ◽  
B. Goins ◽  
A. S. Rudolph ◽  
R. Klipper ◽  
...  

A method for determining oxygen-carrying capacity of blood substitutes has been developed using the short-lived cyclotron-produced positron-emitting isotope 15O. This method measures the oxygen-carrying capacity of the blood substitutes in vivo in the presence of red blood cells and allows determination of changes in the oxygen-carrying capacity over time after exchange transfusion. This method is applied to the blood substitutes of liposome-encapsulated hemoglobin (LEH) and cell-free hemoglobin (Hb). We have used 15O (half-life of 2 min) to quantitate the lung uptake and tissue delivery of [15O2]LEH. Lung uptake studies were performed in intubated, catheterized rats after a 40% exchange transfusion of bovine LEH (LEBH; 0.68 g Hb/kg body wt), human hemolysate LEH (LEHH; 1.0 g Hb/kg body wt), or free bovine hemoglobin (SFHS; 0.56 g Hb/kg body wt). A bolus inhalation of 15O2 (3-5 mCi) was given at 15 min, 3 h, and 24 h post-transfusion. Arterial blood samples were collected, spun, and separated into LEH, red blood cell, and plasma fractions. 15O activity and hemoglobin content were determined for each fraction. Oxygen-carrying capacity was calculated as a percentage of the original red blood cell fraction removed. For LEBH, the carrying capacity was 15% at 15 min, 13% at 3 h, and 1% at 24 h. For LEHH, the carrying capacity was 30% at 15 min, 26% at 3 h, and 19% at 24 h. The marked decrease in carrying capacity at 24 h for LEBH compared with LEHH was attributable to the increased formation of methemoglobin in the circulating LEBH rather than increased removal from circulation, because total hemoglobin concentrations measured for both LEH samples decreased at a similar rate during the 24 h. The presence of methemoglobin reductase and other naturally occurring antioxidants in the LEHH may be responsible for maintaining the higher levels of oxyhemoglobin. Oxygen-carrying capacity for SFHS also decreased over time but at a much sharper rate compared with both LEH formulations. The carrying capacity for SFHS of 8% measured at 15 min decreased to 0.3% at 3 h and undetectable levels at 24 h. This sharper decrease in carrying capacity for SFHS is attributable to the rapid removal of the hemoglobin from circulation.d


1964 ◽  
Vol 207 (2) ◽  
pp. 371-377 ◽  
Author(s):  
A. F. Sellers ◽  
C. E. Stevens ◽  
A. Dobson ◽  
F. D. McLeod

In seven of eight adult bovine females, increase in right ruminal or omasal artery flow was seen upon feeding. This increase continued beyond the act of feeding and was independent of weight-volume and motility change. Blood flow recorded from posterior mesenteric or hypogastric arteries did not show increase on feeding. Feeding under conditions where rumen fermentation was minimal limited the increase in ruminal blood flow to the period when the animal was eating. The passive transfer of feed into the rumen under these circumstances gave no blood flow stimulation. In five adult animals, an increase in CO2 tension within the reticulorumen increased blood flow. Acetate, propionate, and butyrate also stimulated blood flow. Concentration increments of the three organic acids showed increase in amount absorbed per unit time, but no regular relation to blood flow. A method of studying confined volumes is described.


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