Changes in blood gases and acid-base balance in the exercising dog

1962 ◽  
Vol 17 (4) ◽  
pp. 656-660 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ronald L. Wathen ◽  
Howard H. Rostorfer ◽  
Sid Robinson ◽  
Jerry L. Newton ◽  
Michael D. Bailie

Effects of varying rates of treadmill work on blood gases and hydrogen ion concentrations of four healthy young dogs were determined by analyses of blood for O2 and CO2 contents, Po2, Pco2, and pH. Changes in these parameters were also observed during 30-min recovery periods from hard work. Arterial and mixed venous blood samples were obtained simultaneously during work through a polyethylene catheter in the right ventricle and an indwelling needle in an exteriorized carotid artery. Mixed venous O2 content, Po2 and O2 saturation fell with increased work, whereas arterial values showed little or no change. Mixed venous CO2 content, Pco2, and hydrogen ion concentration exhibited little change from resting levels in two dogs but increased significantly in two others during exercise. These values always decreased in the arterial blood during exercise, indicating the presence of respiratory alkalosis. On cessation of exercise, hyperventilation increased the degree of respiratory alkalosis, causing it to be reflected on the venous side of the circulation. Submitted on January 8, 1962

2004 ◽  
Vol 96 (2) ◽  
pp. 428-437 ◽  
Author(s):  
Gabriel Laszlo

The measurement of cardiac output was first proposed by Fick, who published his equation in 1870. Fick's calculation called for the measurement of the contents of oxygen or CO2 in pulmonary arterial and systemic arterial blood. These values could not be determined directly in human subjects until the acceptance of cardiac catheterization as a clinical procedure in 1940. In the meanwhile, several attempts were made to perfect respiratory methods for the indirect determination of blood-gas contents by respiratory techniques that yielded estimates of the mixed venous and pulmonary capillary gas pressures. The immediate uptake of nonresident gases can be used in a similar way to calculate cardiac output, with the added advantage that they are absent from the mixed venous blood. The fact that these procedures are safe and relatively nonintrusive makes them attractive to physiologists, pharmacologists, and sports scientists as well as to clinicians concerned with the physiopathology of the heart and lung. This paper outlines the development of these techniques, with a discussion of some of the ways in which they stimulated research into the transport of gases in the body through the alveolar membrane.


1963 ◽  
Vol 18 (5) ◽  
pp. 933-936 ◽  
Author(s):  
P. Harris ◽  
T. Bailey ◽  
M. Bateman ◽  
M. G. Fitzgerald ◽  
J. Gloster ◽  
...  

The concentrations of lactic acid, pyruvic acid, glucose, and free fatty acids have been measured simultaneously in the blood from the pulmonary and brachial arteries at rest and during exercise in a group of patients with acquired heart disease. The arteriovenous differences in the concentration of lactate, pyruvate, and free fatty acid were such as could be attributed to chance. The average concentration of glucose was slightly but significantly higher in the brachial arterial blood than in the mixed venous blood. cardiac output; lung metabolism; exercise Submitted on January 15, 1963


1963 ◽  
Vol 18 (2) ◽  
pp. 345-348 ◽  
Author(s):  
Winnifred F. Storey ◽  
John Butler

We studied 10 patients with intracardiac left-to-right shunt and 13 patients with other cardiac lesions during exercise. The hyperpnea of muscular exercise was independent of the mixed venous Pco2. In the 13 patients without shunt both the pulmonary arterial Pco2 and the ventilation increased during exercise. In the 10 patients who had shunts ventilation increased during exercise even when the Pco2 in the pulmonary arterial blood did not rise. Submitted on July 5, 1962


2004 ◽  
Vol 96 (4) ◽  
pp. 1349-1356 ◽  
Author(s):  
Murli Manohar ◽  
Thomas E. Goetz ◽  
Aslam S. Hassan

The objective of the present study was to examine the effects of preexercise NaHCO3 administration to induce metabolic alkalosis on the arterial oxygenation in racehorses performing maximal exercise. Two sets of experiments, intravenous physiological saline and NaHCO3 (250 mg/kg iv), were carried out on 13 healthy, sound Thoroughbred horses in random order, 7 days apart. Blood-gas variables were examined at rest and during incremental exercise, leading to 120 s of galloping at 14 m/s on a 3.5% uphill grade, which elicited maximal heart rate and induced pulmonary hemorrhage in all horses in both treatments. NaHCO3 administration caused alkalosis and hemodilution in standing horses, but arterial O2 tension and hemoglobin-O2 saturation were unaffected. Thus NaHCO3 administration caused a reduction in arterial O2 content at rest, although the arterial-to-mixed venous blood O2 content gradient was unaffected. During maximal exercise in both treatments, arterial hypoxemia, desaturation, hypercapnia, acidosis, hyperthermia, and hemoconcentration developed. Although the extent of exercise-induced arterial hypoxemia was similar, there was an attenuation of the desaturation of arterial hemoglobin in the NaHCO3-treated horses, which had higher arterial pH. Despite these observations, the arterial blood O2 content of exercising horses was less in the NaHCO3 experiments because of the hemodilution, and an attenuation of the exercise-induced expansion of the arterial-to-mixed venous blood O2 content gradient was observed. It was concluded that preexercise NaHCO3 administration does not affect the development and/or severity of arterial hypoxemia in Thoroughbreds performing short-term, high-intensity exercise.


1975 ◽  
Vol 38 (5) ◽  
pp. 819-826 ◽  
Author(s):  
K. R. Kollmeyer ◽  
L. I. Kleinman

An extracorporeal venovenous shunt system utilizing a membrane oxygenator to alter venous blood gases was used to study the regulation of ventilation in 28 newborn and 4 adult dogs. There was no effect of the extracorporeal circuit per se (without the oxygenator in the system) on essential cardiovascular or respiratory function. When the puppies were placed on the extracorporeal circuit with the oxygenator in the system to effect changes in mixed venous blood gas composition there was a significant increase in venous P02 (Pv02), a decrease in venous Pco2 (Pvco2), a rise in venous pH (PHv), and a marked fall in minute ventilation (VE). There were no significant changes in cardiovascular function or arterial blood gases to account for the depression of ventilation. Acute changes in Pvo2 produced appropriate directional changes of VE under conditions where other arterial and venous blood gases were held constant. At a low Pvco2/Paco2 ratio, ventilation was depressed compared to those conditions with a high ratio. At any Pvc02/Paco2 ratio, ventilation could be depressed by raising the Pvo2. In adult animals ventilation could not be altered by changing venous blood gases. These experiments support the existence of a respiratory chemoreceptor sensitive to both PO2 and PCO2 in the prepulmonary or venous circulation of the newborn animal.


1992 ◽  
Vol 24 (5) ◽  
pp. 399-401 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. E. MADIGAN ◽  
W. P. THOMAS ◽  
KATHLEEN Q. BACKUS ◽  
W. E. POWELL

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