Variations du débit de la carotide primitive et de ses branches lors de modifications de la composition en O2et en CO2du gaz alvéolaire

Autor: H Normand, J Durand, O Bailliart, H Marotte, J.P. Martineaud
Rok vydání: 1990
Předmět:
Zdroj: Archives Internationales de Physiologie et de Biochimie. 98:179-192
ISSN: 0003-9799
DOI: 10.3109/13813459009113976
Popis: We measured common carotid blood flow using a range gated Doppler velocimeter, and internal and external blood velocities using a continuous Doppler in 20 lowlanders at sea level, under normal barometric pressure, in 10 subjects in an altitude chamber under a barometric pressure of 462 Torr (61.6 KPa) and then in 5 of them over a 3-weeks period at 3850 m of elevation (475 Torr = 63.3 KPa). The same measurements were also performed in 20 permanent residents at 3850 m. Common carotid blood flow was 15% higher in all subjects exposed to high altitude, due to a lowering in downstream resistances since systemic blood pressure did not change at high altitude. The increase in common carotid blood flow was the result of an immediate increase in internal carotid blood velocities observed in the altitude chamber as well as after the arrival at high altitude, but a few days later those velocities in the internal carotid artery declined to values similar to those observed at sea level. In the same time velocities in external carotid artery rose at high altitude, remained steadily elevated and the result is a permanent increase in common carotid blood flow at altitude. In all subjects we performed the same measurements, during an acute inhalation of gas mixtures to try to quantify the mechanisms controlling the changes in common carotid blood flow while changing gas inhalation. In the limits of the variations in PO2 (60 to 400 Torr) and in PCO2 (30 to 50 Torr) the stimulation by CO2 is twice more efficient than the O2 stimulation on vasomotion.
Databáze: OpenAIRE