The effects of hyperoxic and hypercarbic gases on tumour blood flow
Carbogen (95% O 2 and 5% CO 2 ) has been used in preference to 100% oxygen (O 2 ) as a radiosensitizer, because it is believed that CO 2 blocks O 2 -induced vasoconstriction. However, recent work suggests that both normal and tumour arterioles of dorsal flap window chambers exhibit the opposite: no...
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Veröffentlicht in: | British Journal of Cancer 1999-04, Vol.80 (1-2), p.117-126 |
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Zusammenfassung: | Carbogen (95% O
2
and 5% CO
2
) has been used in preference to 100% oxygen (O
2
) as a radiosensitizer, because it is believed that CO
2
blocks O
2
-induced vasoconstriction. However, recent work suggests that both normal and tumour arterioles of dorsal flap window chambers exhibit the opposite: no vasoconstriction vs constriction for O
2
vs carbogen breathing respectively. We hypothesized that CO
2
content might cause vasoconstriction and investigated the effects of three O
2
–CO
2
breathing mixtures on tumour arteriolar diameter (TAD) and blood flow (TBF). Fischer 344 rats with R3230Ac tumours transplanted into window chambers breathed either 1%, 5%, or 10% CO
2
+ O
2
. Intravital microscopy and laser Doppler flowmetry were used to measure TAD and TBF respectively. Animals breathing 1% CO
2
had increased mean arterial pressure (MAP), no change in heart rate (HR), transient reduction in TAD and no change in TBF. Rats breathing 5% CO
2
(carbogen) had transiently increased MAP, decreased HR, reduced TAD and a sustained 25% TBF decrease. Animals exposed to 10% CO
2
experienced a transient decrease in MAP, no HR change, reduced TAD and a 30–40% transient TBF decrease. The effects on MAP, HR, TAD and TBF were not CO
2
dose-dependent, suggesting that complex physiologic mechanisms are involved. Nevertheless, when ≥ 5% CO
2
was breathed, there was clear vasoconstriction and TBF reduction in this model. This suggests that the effects of hypercarbic gases on TBF are site-dependent and that use of carbogen as a radiosensitizer may be counterproductive in certain situations. |
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ISSN: | 0007-0920 1476-5381 1532-1827 |
DOI: | 10.1038/sj.bjc.6690330 |