Gonzalez N C, Clancy R L
Respir Physiol. 1986 May;64(2):213-27. doi: 10.1016/0034-5687(86)90043-5.
Conscious rats maintained for 3 wk at PB 370-380 Torr were studied in a chamber where PIO2 was kept at 68-70 Torr at ambient barometric pressure (740-750 Torr). Blood samples were obtained through an arterial catheter. Controls were pair-fed rats maintained at ambient barometric pressure and studied at PIO2 68-70 Torr for 4 h (acute hypoxia) or at ambient PIO2 (normoxia). Arterial blood pH of 3-wk hypoxic rats was not different from that of normoxic rats. Hypercapnia was produced by increasing PICO2 for 4 h. The 3-wk hypoxic rats showed the highest apparent non-bicarbonate buffer value of arterial blood (beta app): 77 mmol/(pH X kg), compared to 38 in normoxia and 43 mmol/(pH X kg) in acute hypoxia. Comparison of beta app at different times of hypercapnia in intact and in nephrectomized rats suggests that the high beta app of prolonged hypoxia is largely due to an increased renal compensation, and, to a smaller extent, to increased chemical buffering. While the extracellular fluid of normoxic and acute hypoxic rats showed a net gain of base of non-renal origin during hypercapnia, the 3-wk hypoxic rats showed a net non-renal base loss, which may be masked by the increased renal compensation.