Linsenmeier R A, Braun R D
Department of Biomedical Engineering, Northwestern University, Evanston, Illinois 60208-3107.
J Gen Physiol. 1992 Feb;99(2):177-97. doi: 10.1085/jgp.99.2.177.
Oxygen tension (PO2) was measured with microelectrodes within the retina of anesthetized cats during normoxia and hypoxemia (i.e., systemic hypoxia), and photoreceptor oxygen consumption was determined by fitting PO2 measurements to a model of steady-state oxygen diffusion and consumption. Choroidal PO2 fell linearly during hypoxemia, about 0.64 mmHg/mmHg decrease in arterial PO2 (PaO2). The choroidal circulation provided approximately 91% of the photoreceptors' oxygen supply under dark-adapted conditions during both normoxia and hypoxemia. In light adaptation the choroid supplied all of the oxygen during normoxia, but at PaO2's less than 60 mmHg the retinal circulation supplied approximately 10% of the oxygen. In the dark-adapted retina the decrease in choroidal PO2 caused a large decrease in photoreceptor oxygen consumption, from approximately 5.1 ml O2/100 g.min during normoxia to 2.6 ml O2/100 g.min at a PaO2 of 50 mmHg. When the retina was adapted to a rod saturating background, normoxic oxygen consumption was approximately 33% of the dark-adapted value, and hypoxemia caused almost no change in oxygen consumption. This difference in metabolic effects of hypoxemia in light and dark explains why the standing potential of the eye and retinal extracellular potassium concentration were previously found to be more affected by hypoxemia in darkness. Frequency histograms of intraretinal PO2 were used to characterize the oxygenation of the vascularized inner half of the retina, where the oxygen distribution is heterogeneous and simple diffusion models cannot be used. Inner retinal PO2 during normoxia was relatively low: 18 +/- 12 mmHg (mean and SD; n = 8,328 values from 36 profiles) in dark adaptation, and significantly lower, 13 +/- 6 mmHg (n = 4,349 values from 19 profiles) in light adaptation. Even in the dark-adapted retina, 30% of the values were less than 10 mmHg. The mean PO2 in the inner (i.e., proximal) half of the retina was well regulated during hypoxemia. In dark adaptation it was significantly reduced only at PaO2's less than 45 mmHg, and it was reduced less at these PaO2's in light adaptation.
在常氧和低氧血症(即全身性缺氧)期间,使用微电极测量麻醉猫视网膜内的氧分压(PO₂),并通过将PO₂测量值拟合到稳态氧扩散和消耗模型来确定光感受器的氧消耗。低氧血症期间脉络膜PO₂呈线性下降,动脉血氧分压(PaO₂)每降低1mmHg,脉络膜PO₂约降低0.64mmHg。在常氧和低氧血症期间,暗适应条件下脉络膜循环提供了约91%的光感受器氧供应。在明适应时,常氧期间脉络膜提供所有氧气,但当PaO₂低于60mmHg时,视网膜循环提供约10%的氧气。在暗适应的视网膜中,脉络膜PO₂的降低导致光感受器氧消耗大幅下降,从常氧期间的约5.1ml O₂/100g·min降至PaO₂为50mmHg时的2.6ml O₂/100g·min。当视网膜适应杆状细胞饱和背景时,常氧下的氧消耗约为暗适应值的33%,低氧血症几乎不引起氧消耗变化。低氧血症在明和暗中代谢效应的这种差异解释了为什么先前发现眼的静息电位和视网膜细胞外钾浓度在黑暗中受低氧血症影响更大。视网膜内PO₂的频率直方图用于表征视网膜血管化内半部分的氧合情况,该区域氧分布不均匀,不能使用简单的扩散模型。常氧期间视网膜内层PO₂相对较低:暗适应时为18±12mmHg(平均值和标准差;n = 8328个值,来自36个剖面),明适应时显著更低,为13±6mmHg(n = 4349个值,来自19个剖面)。即使在暗适应的视网膜中,30%的值低于10mmHg。低氧血症期间视网膜内(即近端)半部分的平均PO₂调节良好。在暗适应时,仅在PaO₂低于45mmHg时显著降低,在明适应时这些PaO₂下降低程度较小。