Calcitonin gene-related peptide antagonism attenuates the haemodynamic and glycaemic responses to acute hypoxaemia in the late gestation sheep fetus
The fetal defence to acute hypoxaemia involves cardiovascular and metabolic responses, which include peripheral vasoconstriction and hyperglycaemia. Both these responses are mediated via neuroendocrine mechanisms, which require the stimulation of the sympathetic nervous system. In the adult, accumul...
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Veröffentlicht in: | The Journal of physiology 2005-07, Vol.566 (2), p.587-597 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | The fetal defence to acute hypoxaemia involves cardiovascular and metabolic responses, which include peripheral vasoconstriction
and hyperglycaemia. Both these responses are mediated via neuroendocrine mechanisms, which require the stimulation of the
sympathetic nervous system. In the adult, accumulating evidence supports a role for calcitonin gene-related peptide (CGRP)
in the activation of sympathetic outflow. However, the role of CGRP in stimulated cardiovascular and metabolic functions before
birth is completely unknown. This study tested the hypothesis that CGRP plays a role in the fetal cardiovascular and metabolic
defence responses to acute hypoxaemia by affecting sympathetic outflow. Under anaesthesia, five sheep fetuses at 0.8 of gestation
were surgically instrumented with catheters and a femoral arterial Transonic flow-probe. Five days later, fetuses were subjected
to 0.5 h hypoxaemia during either i.v. saline or a selective CGRP antagonist in randomised order. Treatment started 30 min before hypoxaemia and ran continuously
until the end of the challenge. Arterial samples were taken for blood gases, metabolic status and hormone analyses. CGRP antagonism
did not alter basal arterial blood gas, metabolic, cardiovascular or endocrine status. During hypoxaemia, similar falls in
P a,O 2 occurred in all fetuses. During saline infusion, hypoxaemia induced hypertension, bradycardia, femoral vasoconstriction,
hyperglycaemia and an increase in haemoglobin, catecholamines and neuropeptide Y (NPY). In contrast, CGRP antagonism markedly
diminished the femoral vasoconstrictor and glycaemic responses to hypoxaemia, and attenuated the increases in haemoglobin,
catecholamines and NPY. Combined, these results strongly support the hypothesis that CGRP plays a role in the fetal cardiovascular
and metabolic defence to hypoxaemia by affecting sympathetic outflow. |
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ISSN: | 0022-3751 1469-7793 |
DOI: | 10.1113/jphysiol.2005.085431 |