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Pediatric Research 1987-May

Ouabain effects on oxygen physiology in anemic lambs.

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W Berman
G Lister
D Alverson
S Olsen

Keywords

Abstract

We studied the effects of anemia and ouabain administration on cardiac function, oxygen physiology, and blood catecholamine levels in nine newborn lambs. We measured oxygen consumption continuously, along with traditional hemodynamic variables. Oxygen transport was calculated. Following baseline measurements, lambs were made anemic (mean hematocrit = 12%) by isovolemic exchange transfusion with Plasmanate, and measurements were repeated. Thereafter ouabain was administered as a 75 micrograms/kg bolus, followed by 30 min of infusion at a rate of 0.05 microgram/kg/min. Measurements were repeated at the conclusion of infusion. Anemia was associated with a heart rate related rise in left ventricular rate of pressure rise, a rise in oxygen consumption, an increase in cardiac output, a decrease in systemic vascular resistance, and a rise in fractional oxygen extraction (oxygen consumption/transport). Following ouabain administration, cardiac output, oxygen consumption, and stroke work fell, but left ventricular rate of pressure rise and the extraction ratio did not change. Serum levels of epinephrine and norepinephrine rose with sustained anemia and ouabain infusion. In this setting, ouabain effects are manifested primarily by alterations in oxygen transport and metabolism rather than by changes in traditional assessments of left ventricular contractile function.

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