Chemoreflex and endocrine components of cardiovascular responses to acute hypoxemia in the llama fetus
Author
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Giussani, Dino A.
Author
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Riquelme, Raquel A.
Author
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Moraga, Fernando A.
Author
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McGarrigle, Hugh H.G.
Author
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Gaete, Cristián R.
Author
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Sanhueza, Emilia M.
Author
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Hanson, Mark A.
Author
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Llanos Mansilla, Jorge
Admission date
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2019-01-29T16:00:08Z
Available date
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2019-01-29T16:00:08Z
Publication date
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1996
Cita de ítem
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American Journal of Physiology - Regulatory Integrative and Comparative Physiology, Volumen 271, Issue 1 40-1, 2018,
Identifier
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03636119
Identifier
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https://repositorio.uchile.cl/handle/2250/163043
Abstract
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We tested the hypothesis that the llama fetus has a blunted cardiovascular chemoreflex response to hypoxemia by investigating the effects of acute hypoxemia on perfusion pressure, heart rate, and the distribution of the combined ventricular output in 10 chronically instrumented fetal llamas at 0.6-0.7 gestation. Four llama fetuses had the carotid sinus nerves sectioned. In the intact fetuses, there was a marked bradycardia, an increase in perfusion pressure, and a pronounced peripheral vasoconstriction during hypoxemia. These cardiovascular responses during hypoxemia in intact fetuses were accompanied by a pronounced increase in plasma vasopressin, but not in plasma angiotensin II concentrations. Carotid denervation prevented the bradycardia at the onset of hypoxemia, but it did not affect the intense vasoconstriction during hypoxemia. Plasma vasopressin and angiotensin II levels were not measured in carotid-denervated fetuses. Our results do not support the hypothesis that the carotid