Resting oxygenation of rat and rabbit intestine: arteriolar and capillary contributions

Author:

Bohlen H. G.1,Lash J. M.1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Physiology and Biophysics, Indiana University Medical School, Indianapolis 46202, USA.

Abstract

Counter-current exchange of oxygen may occur between inflow and outflow microvessels of the small intestine and greatly influence the dominant sites of tissue oxygenation. To determine the location and magnitude of potential exchange, percent saturation of hemoglobin with oxygen (%SHb) was measured in microvessels throughout the intestine of rats and rabbits. Oxygen losses from systemic arterial blood through large and intermediate arterioles (second order, 2A) was 5-7%SHb in both species, and there was no evidence of an increase in percent saturation along intermediate and large venules. A larger loss of oxygen from arterioles and an increase in venous saturation would be evident if significant arteriolar to venular counter-current exchange of oxygen occurred in the submucosa. From 2A to the villus tip, arteriolar saturation decreased approximately 10%SHb in rabbits and approximately 15%SHb in rats; the villus tip percent saturation was 72.9 +/- 3.9%SHb in rabbits and 69.9 +/- 2.9%SHb in rats. An additional decrease of 5%SHb in rabbits and 15%SHb in rats occurred across the villus capillaries and smallest venules. Although the total reduction in percent saturation across the villi was different between the two species, 70-90% of the total arteriovenous oxygen losses occurred in the capillaries and small arterioles of the villi. We found no evidence of counter-current exchange of oxygen in villi or any other vascular region. Rather, as appears to occur in most organs, small arterioles in conjunction with capillaries dominate resting oxygen exchange to tissue.

Publisher

American Physiological Society

Subject

Physiology (medical),Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine,Physiology

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