Cardioprotective effect of chronic hypoxia is blunted by concomitant hypercapnia

The effect of chronic hypercapnia on cardioprotection induced by chronic hypoxia was investigated in adult male Wistar rats exposed to isobaric hypoxia (10 % O(2)) for three weeks. In the first experimental group, CO(2) in the chamber was fully absorbed; in the second group, its level was increased...

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Published inPhysiological research Vol. 52; no. 2; pp. 171 - 175
Main Authors Neckár, J, Sźárszoi, O, Herget, J, Ostádal, B, Kolár, F
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Czech Republic 2003
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Summary:The effect of chronic hypercapnia on cardioprotection induced by chronic hypoxia was investigated in adult male Wistar rats exposed to isobaric hypoxia (10 % O(2)) for three weeks. In the first experimental group, CO(2) in the chamber was fully absorbed; in the second group, its level was increased to 4.1 %. Normoxic controls were kept in atmospheric air. Anesthetized open-chest animals were subjected to 20-min LAD coronary artery occlusion and 3-h reperfusion for infarct size determination (TTC staining). Chronic hypoxia alone reduced body weight and increased hematocrit; these effects were significantly attenuated by hypercapnia. The infarct size was reduced from 61.9+/-2.2 % of the area at risk in the normoxic controls to 44.5+/-3.3 % in the hypoxic group (P<0.05). Hypercapnia blunted the infarct size-limiting effect of hypoxia (54.8+/-2.4 %; P<0.05). It is concluded that increased CO(2) levels in the inspired air suppress the development of the chronic hypoxia-induced cardioprotective mechanism, possibly by interacting with ROS signalling pathways.
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ISSN:0862-8408
1802-9973
DOI:10.33549/physiolres.930303