Publication | Closed Access
Mechanical, Electrical, and Biochemical Effects of Hypoxia and Substrate Removal on Spontaneously Active Vascular Smooth Muscle
90
Citations
23
References
1977
Year
Muscle FunctionBiomedical EngineeringCellular PhysiologyPo 2Integrative PhysiologyBiochemical EffectsPhysiological ResearchSkeletal MuscleBiomechanicsApplied PhysiologyHealth SciencesMechanobiologyAnimal PhysiologyMolecular PhysiologyVascular AdaptationHypoxia (Medicine)Extreme HypoxiaVascular BiologyNeuromuscular PhysiologyPharmacologyPotassium HomeostasisSubstrate RemovalSpontaneous Mechanical ActivityNeurophysiologyPhysiologyElectrophysiologyCardiovascular PhysiologyMetabolismMedicine
Abstract Effects of hypoxia and glucose‐free solution on the isolated rat portal vein were studied. Decrease of extracellular Po 2 below 50 mm Hg caused graded inhibition of spontaneous mechanical activity; below 7 mm Hg. inhibition was complete in most preparations. Contracture force of depolarized portal vein was less sensitive to decreases in Po 2 . Responses to noradrenaline at all concentrations were markedly depressed at extreme hypoxia. Sucrose‐gap experiments showed that hypoxia reduced the spontaneous electrical spike discharge. Mean tissue contents of PCr, ATP and glycogen (expressed as glucose) were 3.02, 2.47 and 5.07μmol/g cell wt. in spontaneously active control muscles and 1.07, 1.65 and 1.83 after 20 min anoxia. Physiological variations in Po 2 may influence myogenic activity of vascular smooth muscle largely through an action at the membrane level and this mechanism may participate in local blood flow control. Calculations indicated that the graded response to hypoxia in the present in vitro experiments was not due to diffusion limitation. Spontaneous mechanical activity was relatively well maintained even after prolonged exposure to glucose‐free solution, whereas the responses to K 1 and noradrenaline were markedly suppressed. Electrophysiological recordings during spontaneous activity indicated desynchronization and impaired conduction. PCr and ATP were maintained at control levels and glycogen reduced by 50 per cent after 2 h in glucose‐free medium. Indications of the use of amino acids (glutamate) as substrate under these conditions were obtained.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1