Development of pulmonary vascular response to oxygen

F. C. Morin 3rd, E. A. Egan, W. Ferguson and C. E. Lundgren Department of Pediatrics, University at Buffalo, New York. The ability of the pulmonary circulation of the fetal lamb to respond to a rise in oxygen tension was studied from 94 to 146 days of gestation. The unanesthetized ewe breathed room...

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Veröffentlicht in:American journal of physiology. Heart and circulatory physiology 1988-03, Vol.254 (3), p.H542-H546
Hauptverfasser: Morin, F. C., 3rd, Egan, E. A, Ferguson, W, Lundgren, C. E
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:F. C. Morin 3rd, E. A. Egan, W. Ferguson and C. E. Lundgren Department of Pediatrics, University at Buffalo, New York. The ability of the pulmonary circulation of the fetal lamb to respond to a rise in oxygen tension was studied from 94 to 146 days of gestation. The unanesthetized ewe breathed room air at normal atmospheric pressure, followed by 100% oxygen at three atmospheres absolute pressure in a hyperbaric chamber. In eleven near-term lambs (132 to 146 days of gestation), fetal arterial oxygen tension (PaO2) increased from 25 +/- 1 to 55 +/- 6 Torr (mean +/- SE), which increased the proportion of right ventricular output distributed to the fetal lungs from 8 +/- 1 to 59 +/- 5%. In five very immature lambs (94 to 101 days of gestation), fetal PaO2 increased from 27 +/- 1 to 174 +/- 70 Torr, but the proportion of right ventricular output distributed to the lung did not change, 8 +/- 1 to 9 +/- 1%. In five of the near-term lambs, pulmonary blood flow was measured. It increased from 34 +/- 3 to 298 +/- 35 ml.kg fetal wt-1.min-1, an 8.8-fold increase. We conclude that the pulmonary circulation of the fetal lamb does not respond to an increase in oxygen tension before 101 days of gestation; however, near term an increase in oxygen tension alone can induce the entire increase in pulmonary blood flow that normally occurs after the onset of breathing at birth.
ISSN:0363-6135
0002-9513
1522-1539
2163-5773
DOI:10.1152/ajpheart.1988.254.3.H542