Department of Radiology, Experimental Imaging Centre, Hotchkiss Brain Institute, University of Calgary, Calgary, Alberta, Canada.
High Alt Med Biol. 2011 Spring;12(1):71-7. doi: 10.1089/ham.2010.1038.
Exposure to high altitude or hypobaric hypoxia results in a series of metabolic, physiologic, and genetic changes that serve to acclimate the brain to hypoxia. Tissue Po(2) (Pto(2)) is a sensitive index of the balance between oxygen delivery and utilization and can be considered to represent the summation of such factors as cerebral blood flow, capillary density, hematocrit, arterial Po(2), and metabolic rate. As such, it can be used as a marker of the extent of acclimation. We developed a method using electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) to measure Pto(2) in unanesthetized subjects with a chronically implanted sensor. EPR was used to measure rat cortical tissue Pto(2) in awake rats during acute hypoxia and over a time course of acclimation and deacclimation to hypobaric hypoxia. This was done to simulate the effects on brain Pto(2) of traveling to altitude for a limited period. Acute reduction of inspired O(2) to 10% caused a decline from 26.7 ± 2.2 to 13.0 ± 1.5 mmHg (mean ± SD). Addition of 10% CO(2) to animals breathing 10% O(2) returned Pto(2) to values measured while breathing 21% O(2,) indicating that hypercapnia can reverse the effects of acute hypoxia. Pto(2) in animals acclimated to 10% O(2) was similar to that measured preacclimation when breathing 21% O(2). Using a novel, individualized statistical model, it was shown that the T(1/2) of the Pto(2) response during exposure to chronic hypoxia was approximately 2 days. This indicates a capacity for rapid adaptation to hypoxia. When subjects were returned to normoxia, there was a transient hyperoxygenation, followed by a return to lower values with a T(1/2) of deacclimation of 1.5 to 3 days. These data indicate that exposure to hypoxia results in significant improvements in steady-state oxygenation for a given inspired O(2) and that both acclimation and deacclimation can occur within days.
暴露于高海拔或低氧环境会导致一系列代谢、生理和遗传变化,从而使大脑适应低氧环境。组织 Po(2) (Pto(2)) 是氧输送和利用平衡的敏感指标,可以被认为代表了脑血流、毛细血管密度、红细胞压积、动脉 Po(2)和代谢率等因素的总和。因此,它可以用作适应程度的标志物。我们开发了一种使用电子顺磁共振(EPR)测量慢性植入传感器的未麻醉对象的 Pto(2)的方法。EPR 用于测量急性低氧期间清醒大鼠的皮质组织 Pto(2),并在适应和去适应低氧环境的时间过程中进行测量。这是为了模拟在高原地区短暂旅行对大脑 Pto(2)的影响。急性降低吸入氧气至 10%导致从 26.7±2.2 降至 13.0±1.5mmHg(平均值±标准差)。向呼吸 10%氧气的动物中添加 10% CO(2) 可使 Pto(2)恢复至呼吸 21%氧气时测量的值,表明高碳酸血症可以逆转急性缺氧的影响。在适应 10%氧气的动物中,Pto(2)与在呼吸 21%氧气时测量的预适应值相似。使用一种新的个体化统计模型,表明在暴露于慢性缺氧期间 Pto(2)响应的 T(1/2)约为 2 天。这表明对低氧有快速适应的能力。当研究对象返回正常氧合时,会出现短暂的过度氧合,然后在 1.5 至 3 天的脱适应 T(1/2)期间恢复到较低的值。这些数据表明,暴露于低氧会导致在给定的吸入氧气下显著改善稳态氧合,并且适应和脱适应都可以在几天内发生。