Affiliation:
1. Department of Biological Sciences, University of Alberta, Edmonton, Alberta, Canada T6G 2E9
Abstract
In rats, prolonged stable hypothermia (∼24 h at body temperature of 19°C) is characterized by a time-dependent increase in hematocrit, plasma osmolality, and red blood cell fragility and a decrease in plasma volume. These changes impede tissue microcirculation and could limit survival. As a countermeasure, we used plasma volume expanders of both long (hetastarch)- and short-lasting (mannitol) characteristics to improve microcirculation and hopefully hypothermia survival. Infusion of 6% hetastarch at hour 3 in hypothermia significantly ( P < 0.05) enhanced survival over saline control (33.5 vs. 23.8 h); a significant delay in the increases of hematocrit and cell fragility was also observed compared with those in saline controls. Treating the animal with 6% hetastarch at hour 20 during hypothermia caused a similar but less-effective improvement in survival. In contrast, treating the rats with 6% mannitol at hour 3 or 20 during hypothermia failed to enhance survival over saline control, although transient improvement in plasma volume was observed. Our results indicate that by using a long-lasting volume expander, which tends to better maintain plasma volume and rheological parameters governing microcirculation than does saline or a short-lasting volume expander, hypothermia survival can be significantly improved.
Publisher
American Physiological Society
Subject
Physiology (medical),Physiology
Cited by
7 articles.
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