Publication
Title
α-Adrenergic contribution to the cardiovascular response to acute hypoxemia in the chick embryo
Author
Abstract
Fetal responses to acute hypoxemia include bradycardia, increase in blood pressure, and peripheral vasoconstriction. Peripheral vasoconstriction contributes to the redistribution of the cardiac output away from ancillary vascular beds toward myocardial, cerebral, and adrenal circulations. We investigated the effect of α-adrenergic receptor blockade on this fetal response. Fluorescent microspheres were used to measure cardiac output distribution during basal and hypoxemic conditions with and without phentolamine treatment. Phentolamine altered basal cardiac output distribution, indicating a basal α-adrenergic tone, but this was mainly noted at the earlier stages of incubation. During hypoxemia, phentolamine prevented vasoconstriction in the carcass. At day 19 of incubation, the percent cardiac output distributed to the carcass increased by 20% compared with a decrease in the control group by 17%. Phentolamine markedly attenuated the subsequent redistribution of the cardiac output toward the brain (from +102% in the control group to −25% in the phentolamine-treated group) and the heart (from +196% in the control group to +69% in the phentolamine-treated group). In the chick embryo, α-adrenergic mechanisms contribute to the maintenance of basal vascular tone and to the redistribution of the cardiac output away from the peripheral circulations toward the brain and heart during hypoxemic conditions.
Language
English
Source (journal)
American journal of physiology: regulatory, integrative and comparative physiology. - Bethesda, Md
Publication
Bethesda, Md : 2001
ISSN
0363-6119
DOI
10.1152/AJPREGU.2001.281.6.R2004
Volume/pages
281 :6 (2001) , p. 2004-2010
ISI
000172131200030
Full text (Publisher's DOI)
Full text (publisher's version - intranet only)
UAntwerpen
Publication type
Subject
External links
Web of Science
Record
Identifier
Creation 11.02.2019
Last edited 22.08.2024
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