oxygen conductance
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2018 ◽  
Vol 125 (1) ◽  
pp. 124-133 ◽  
Author(s):  
Aleksander S. Golub ◽  
Sami C. Dodhy ◽  
Roland N. Pittman

The oxygen dependence of respiration was obtained in situ in microscopic regions of rat spinotrapezius muscle for different levels of metabolic activity produced by electrical stimulation at rates from 0.5 to 8 Hz. The rate of O2 consumption (V̇o2) was measured with phosphorescence quenching microscopy (PQM) as the rate of O2 disappearance in a muscle with rapid flow arrest. The phosphorescent oxygen probe was loaded into the interstitial space of the muscle to give O2 tension (Po2) in the interstitium. A set of sigmoid curves relating the Po2 dependence of V̇o2 was obtained with a Po2-dependent region below a characteristic Po2 (~30 mmHg) and a Po2-independent region above this Po2. The V̇o2(Po2) plots were fit by the Hill equation containing O2 demand (rest to 8 Hz: 216 ± 26 to 636 ± 77 nl O2/cm3 s) and the Po2 value corresponding to O2 demand/2 (rest to 8 Hz: 22 ± 4 to 11 ± 1 mmHg). The initial Po2 and V̇o2 pairs of values measured at the moment of flow arrest formed a straight line, determining the rate of oxygen supply. This line had a negative slope, equal to the oxygen conductance for the O2 supply chain. For each level of tissue blood flow the set of possible values of Po2 and V̇o2 consists of the intersection points between this O2 supply line and the set of V̇o2 curves. An electrical analogy for the intraorgan O2 supply and consumption is an inverting transistor amplifier, which allows the use of graphic analysis methods for prediction of the behavior of the oxygen processing system in organs. NEW & NOTEWORTHY The sigmoidal shape of curves describing oxygen dependence of muscle respiration varies from basal to maximal workload and characterizes the oxidative metabolism of muscle. The rate of O2 supply depends on extracellular O2 tension and is determined by the overall oxygen conductance in the muscle. The dynamics of oxygen consumption is determined by the supply line that intersects the oxygen demand curves. An electrical analogy for the oxygen supply/consumption system is an inverting transistor amplifier.


2015 ◽  
Vol 35 (3) ◽  
pp. 432-442 ◽  
Author(s):  
Peter M Rasmussen ◽  
Sune N Jespersen ◽  
Leif Østergaard

The interpretation of regional blood flow and blood oxygenation changes during functional activation has evolved from the concept of ‘neurovascular coupling’, and hence the regulation of arteriolar tone to meet metabolic demands. The efficacy of oxygen extraction was recently shown to depend on the heterogeneity of capillary flow patterns downstream. Existing compartment models of the relation between tissue metabolism, blood flow, and blood oxygenation, however, typically assume homogenous microvascular flow patterns. To take capillary flow heterogeneity into account, we modeled the effect of capillary transit time heterogeneity (CTH) on the ‘oxygen conductance’ used in compartment models. We show that the incorporation of realistic reductions in CTH during functional hyperemia improves model fits to dynamic blood flow and oxygenation changes acquired during functional activation in a literature animal study. Our results support earlier observations that oxygen diffusion properties seemingly change during various physiologic stimuli, and posit that this phenomenon is related to parallel changes in capillary flow patterns. Furthermore, our results suggest that CTH must be taken into account when inferring brain metabolism from changes in blood flow- or blood oxygenation-based signals .


2001 ◽  
Vol 204 (21) ◽  
pp. 3747-3753
Author(s):  
Nathan E. Mills ◽  
M. Christopher Barnhart ◽  
R. D. Semlitsch

SUMMARYAquatic amphibian eggs frequently encounter hypoxic conditions that have the potential to limit oxygen uptake and thereby slow embryonic development and hatching. Oxygen limitation might be avoided if egg capsule surface area and oxygen conductance increased in response to hypoxia. We investigated this possibility in two salamander species, Ambystoma annulatum and Ambystoma talpoideum. The effective surface area of egg capsules increased in response to hypoxia, which increased the conductance for oxygen and enhanced oxygen transport. The ability of amphibian eggs to adjust their conductance in response to oxygen availability may increase survival in hypoxic environments.


1994 ◽  
Vol 197 (1) ◽  
pp. 31-46
Author(s):  
R S Seymour ◽  
J P Loveridge

In Zimbabwe, female Chiromantis xerampelina construct spherical foam nests that are suspended above temporary water. The nests average 624 ml in volume and contain 854 eggs. The 1.7 mm ova have exceptionally thin jelly capsules and are dispersed in the foamy core of the nest, which is surrounded by a layer of eggless foam. At 25 degrees C, each embryo requires 3.5 days to reach hatching at developmental stage 22, during which it consumes 30 microliters of oxygen. After hatching, each larva remains in the nest for 2 more days and consumes a further 123 microliters of oxygen. The fresh foam contains 77% air, which is sufficient to supply all of the oxygen requirements of the embryos until well after they hatch. Therefore, the size of the egg mass is not limited by oxygen availability as it is in many other anurans. Oxygen also diffuses into the nest from the atmosphere, but the rate is severely restricted by the wet foam, despite the presence of bubbles. Drying of the outer layer of foam greatly increases its oxygen conductance, but the larvae remain in the inner core of wet foam, where they compete for oxygen at the periphery. With further drying of the nest, the wet foam diminishes in volume and concentrates the larvae at a time when their oxygen demands are approaching the maximum. Oxygen pressures within the wet foam drop below 10 kPa and oxygen uptake by the larvae becomes progressively limited, possibly stimulating their emergence from the nest. The delay between hatching and escape from the nest permits the larvae to grow and mature to a stage at which all of the clutch can emerge simultaneously.


1992 ◽  
Vol 263 (4) ◽  
pp. R741-R746
Author(s):  
V. Bhargava ◽  
N. C. Lai ◽  
J. B. Graham ◽  
S. C. Hempleman ◽  
R. Shabetai

Digital radiographic imaging of blood circulation through leopard shark gills establishes a secondary lamellar transit time of 6.5 s. This duration, combined with estimates of cardiac output and hemoglobin-oxygen affinity, permits novel modeling of gill oxygen transfer in the time domain. The temporal model allows assessment of factors contributing to previously noted discrepancies between physiological and morphometric branchial oxygen conductance estimates. Lamellar transit time for shark blood is 20 times greater than human alveolar transit time, and thus correlates with a slower rate of hemoglobin-oxygen binding and a greater diffusion distance.


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