Oxygen Cycles and Metabolic Autoregulation

Author:

HALSEY JAMES H.1,MCFARLAND SCOTT1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Neurology and the Cerebral Vascular Research Center, University of Alabama Medical Center, 1919 Seventh Avenue South, Birmingham, Alabama 35294

Abstract

Rhythmical three to eight per minute cycles in oxygen availability are characteristic of recordings from chronically implanted open tip polarographic electrodes. These were demonstrated to be progressively decreased in amplitude as mean arterial blood pressure was raised from 75 mm Hg to 160 mm Hg, at which level they were abolished. Amplitude of these :ycles also decreased as BP was reduced below 75 mm Hg and they again disappeared at an iverage of 60 mm Hg. Oscillation frequency appeared to be a function of rate of metabolism, oeing reduced by anesthesia, hypothermia, and ischemia. An hypothesis is proposed which relates these oscillations to the feedback delay between metabolic generation of CO 2 and the appropriate adjustment in tension of the pH sensitive muscle of the precapillary arteriole which in turn determines rate of local CO 2 clearance. The changes in amplitude of the oxygen cycles may indicate alteration in pH reactivity of precapillary smooth muscle as a function of BP.

Publisher

Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)

Subject

Advanced and Specialised Nursing,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine,Clinical Neurology

Reference21 articles.

1. Effect of blood pressure on blood flow in ischemic and in nonischemic cerebral cortex: The phenomena of autoregulation and luxury perfusion

2. Brain Extracellular pH: The Main Factor Controlling Cerebral Blood Flow

3. Cerebral Blood Flow In Man at High Altitude

4. Severinghaus J Nemoto E Hoff J: The CO shuttle in cerebral arteriolar ECF H+ control. In Fieschi C (ed): Cerebral Blood Flow and Intracranial Pressure. New York S Karger 1972

5. Regulation of blood flow in single capillaries;Johnson PC;Amer J Physiol,1967

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