Cardiovascular and endocrine responses to acute hypoxaemia during and following dexamethasone infusion in the ovine fetus
This study investigated the effects of fetal treatment with dexamethasone on ovine fetal cardiovascular defence responses to acute hypoxaemia, occurring either during or 48 h following the period of glucocorticoid exposure. To address the mechanisms underlying these responses, chemoreflex function a...
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Veröffentlicht in: | The Journal of physiology 2003-05, Vol.549 (1), p.271-287 |
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Zusammenfassung: | This study investigated the effects of fetal treatment with dexamethasone on ovine fetal cardiovascular defence responses
to acute hypoxaemia, occurring either during or 48 h following the period of glucocorticoid exposure. To address the mechanisms
underlying these responses, chemoreflex function and plasma concentrations of catecholamines, neuropeptide Y (NPY) and vasopressin
were measured. Under general halothane anaesthesia, 26 Welsh Mountain sheep fetuses were surgically prepared for long-term
recording at between 117 and 120 days of gestation (dGA; term is â¼145 days) with vascular catheters and a Transonic flow probe
around a femoral artery. Following at least 5 days of recovery, fetuses were randomly assigned to one of two experimental
groups. After 48 h of baseline recording, at 125 ± 1 dGA, half of the fetuses ( n = 13) were continuously infused i.v. with dexamethasone for 48 h at a rate of 2.06 ± 0.13 μg kg â1 h â1 . The remaining 13 fetuses were infused with heparinized saline at the same rate (controls). At 127 ± 1 dGA, 2 days from the
onset of infusions, seven fetuses from each group were subjected to 1 h of acute hypoxaemia. At 129 ± 1 dGA, 2 days after
the end of infusions, six fetuses from each group were subjected to 1 h of acute hypoxaemia. Similar reductions in fetal partial
pressure of arterial oxygen occurred in control and dexamethasone-treated fetuses during the acute hypoxaemia protocols. In
control fetuses, acute hypoxaemia led to transient bradycardia, femoral vasoconstriction and significant increases in plasma
concentrations of catecholamines, vasopressin and NPY. In fetuses subjected to acute hypoxaemia during dexamethasone treatment,
the increase in plasma NPY was enhanced, the bradycardic response was prolonged, and the plasma catecholamine and vasopressin
responses were diminished. In fetuses subjected to acute hypoxaemia 48 h following dexamethasone treatment, femoral vasoconstriction
and plasma catecholamine and vasopressin responses were enhanced, whilst the prolonged bradycardia and augmented plasma NPY
responses persisted. These data show that fetal treatment with dexamethasone modifies the pattern and magnitude of fetal cardiovascular
responses to acute oxygen deprivation. Modifications to different mechanisms mediating the fetal defence responses to acute
hypoxaemia that occur during dexamethasone treatment may reverse, persist or even become enhanced by 48 h following the treatment
period. |
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ISSN: | 0022-3751 1469-7793 |
DOI: | 10.1113/jphysiol.2002.036418 |