Influence of G-suit abdominal bladder inflation on gas exchange during +GZ stress
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Published:1985-02-01
Issue:2
Volume:58
Page:506-513
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ISSN:8750-7587
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Container-title:Journal of Applied Physiology
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language:en
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Short-container-title:Journal of Applied Physiology
Author:
Modell H. I.,Beeman P.,Mendenhall J.
Abstract
Available data relating duration of +GZ stress to blood gas exchange status is limited. Furthermore, studies focusing on pulmonary gas exchange during +GZ stress when abdominal restriction is imposed have yielded conflicting results. To examine the time course of blood gas changes occurring during exposure to +GZ stress in dogs and the influence of G-suit abdominal bladder inflation on this time course, seven spontaneously breathing pentobarbital-anesthetized adult mongrel dogs were exposed to 60 s of up to +5 GZ stress with and without G-suit abdominal bladder inflation. Arterial and mixed venous blood were sampled for blood gas analysis during the first and last 20 s of the exposure and at 3 min postexposure. Little change in blood gas status was seen at +3 GZ regardless of G-suit status. However, with G-suit inflation, arterial PO2 fell by a mean of 14.7 Torr during the first 20 s at +4 Gz (P less than 0.01, t test) and 20.6 Torr at +5 GZ (P less than 0.01). It continued to fall an additional 10 Torr during the next 40 s at both +4 and +5 GZ. Arterial PO2 was still 5–10 Torr below control values (P less than 0.05) 3 min postexposure. A second series of experiments paralleling the first focused on blood gas status during repeated exposure to acceleration. Blood gas status was assessed in five dogs during the late 20 s of two 60-s exposures separated by 3 min at 0 GZ. No significant differences between the initial and repeated exposures were detected. The data indicate that G-suit abdominal bladder inflation promotes increased venous admixture.
Publisher
American Physiological Society
Subject
Physiology (medical),Physiology