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Hypercapnia counteracts captopril-induced depression of gastric mucosal oxygenation

Author:
Vollmer, Christian  Schwartges, Ingo  Behmke, Robert  Bauer, Inge  Picker, Olaf  


Journal:
JOURNAL OF ENDOCRINOLOGY


Issue Date:
2013


Abstract(summary):

Hypercapnia (HC) increases systemic oxygen delivery (DO2) and gastric mucosal oxygenation. However, it activates the renin-angiotensin-aldosterone system (RAAS), which conversely reduces mesenteric perfusion. The aims of this study were to evaluate the effect of RAAS inhibition during normocapnia and HC on oral and gastric mucosal oxygenation (mu HbO(2)) and to assess the effect of blood pressure under these circumstances. Five dogs were repeatedly anesthetized to study the effects of ACE inhibition (ACE-I; 5 mg/kg captopril, followed by 0.25 mg/kg per h) on mu HbO(2) (reflectance spectrophotometry) and hemodynamic variables during normocapnia (end-tidal CO2=35 mmHg) and HC (end-expiratory carbon dioxide (etCO(2))=70 mmHg). In the control group, the dogs were subjected to HC alone. To exclude the effects of reduced blood pressure, in one group, blood pressure was maintained at baseline values via titrated phenylephrine (PHE) infusion during HC and additional captopril infusion. ACE-I strongly reduced gastric mu HbO(2) from 72+/-2 to 65+/-2% and mean arterial pressure (MAP) from 64+/-2 to 48+/-4 mmHg, while DO2 remained unchanged. This effect was counteracted in the presence of HC, which increased gastric mu HbO(2) from 73+/-3 to 79+/-6% and DO2 from 15+/-2 to 22+/-4 ml/kg per min during ACE-I without differences during HC alone. However, MAP decreased similar to that observed during ACE-I alone from 66+/-3 to 47+/-5 mmHg, while left ventricular contractility (dP(max)) increased from 492+/-63 to 758+/-119 mmHg/s. Titrated infusion of PHE had no additional effects on mu HbO(2). In summary, our data suggest that RAAS inhibition reduces gastric mucosal oxygenation in healthy dogs. HC not only abolishes this effect, but also increases mu HbO(2), DO2, and dP(max). The increase in mu HbO(2) during ACE-I under HC is in accordance with our results independent of blood pressure.


Page:
245---253


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