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Modulation by carbon dioxide and pH of the contractile responses to potassium and prostaglandin F2 alpha in isolated human pial arteries

Reinstrup, Peter LU ; Uski, Tore LU and Messeter, Kenneth (1992) In British Journal of Anaesthesia 69(6). p.615-620
Abstract
Variation of PCO2 with concomitant changes in extracellular pH (pHo) may modulate cerebrovascular resistance, but the direct actions of carbon dioxide and pHo on human cerebral arteries are unknown. In this study, we have evaluated the effects of different carbon dioxide tensions (2.7, 4.2 and 7.2 kPa) with either fixed (pHo = 7.44) or concomitant changes in pHo, on contractions induced by depolarization (potassium) or receptor stimulation (prostaglandin F2 alpha) in isolated human pial arteries. Isolated changes in PCO2 had no significant effect on either potency (unchanged EC50 value) or the maximum response (Emax) in potassium-contracted arteries. Hypercapnia with uncompensated pHo significantly decreased both EC50 and Emax values,... (More)
Variation of PCO2 with concomitant changes in extracellular pH (pHo) may modulate cerebrovascular resistance, but the direct actions of carbon dioxide and pHo on human cerebral arteries are unknown. In this study, we have evaluated the effects of different carbon dioxide tensions (2.7, 4.2 and 7.2 kPa) with either fixed (pHo = 7.44) or concomitant changes in pHo, on contractions induced by depolarization (potassium) or receptor stimulation (prostaglandin F2 alpha) in isolated human pial arteries. Isolated changes in PCO2 had no significant effect on either potency (unchanged EC50 value) or the maximum response (Emax) in potassium-contracted arteries. Hypercapnia with uncompensated pHo significantly decreased both EC50 and Emax values, whereas uncompensated hypocapnia significantly increased the EC50 value without any effect on Emax. Concentration-response curves induced by prostaglandin (PG) F2 alpha were shifted significantly to the right (increased EC50 = decreased potency) during both hypo- and hypercapnia, independent of changes in pHo. The maximal responses were enhanced significantly during hypocapnia (Emax = 110 (SEM 2)%), but this enhancement was converted into a slight attenuation when pHo was compensated (Emax = 92 (4)%). Hypercapnia, with or without compensation of pHo, decreased the Emax values to 69 (16)% and 73 (9)%, respectively. We conclude that hypocapnia increases contractility in human pial arteries--an effect which is reversed by compensation of pHo. In contrast, the hypercapnic decrease of PGF2 alpha-induced contractions appears to be independent of pHo. The results confirm a relationship between contractility and pHo, but do not exclude a direct action of carbon dioxide in receptor-stimulated arteries. (Less)
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author
; and
organization
publishing date
type
Contribution to journal
publication status
published
subject
keywords
Acid-base equilibrium: pH. Arteries: contractile response, human pial arteries, vascular resistance. Carbon dioxide: tension.
in
British Journal of Anaesthesia
volume
69
issue
6
pages
615 - 620
publisher
Elsevier
external identifiers
  • pmid:1467106
ISSN
1471-6771
language
English
LU publication?
yes
id
c34f8e48-7be8-46c7-9a3d-4f286c6bee3e (old id 1106526)
alternative location
http://bja.oxfordjournals.org/cgi/reprint/69/6/615
date added to LUP
2016-04-01 12:13:39
date last changed
2018-11-21 20:05:14
@article{c34f8e48-7be8-46c7-9a3d-4f286c6bee3e,
  abstract     = {{Variation of PCO2 with concomitant changes in extracellular pH (pHo) may modulate cerebrovascular resistance, but the direct actions of carbon dioxide and pHo on human cerebral arteries are unknown. In this study, we have evaluated the effects of different carbon dioxide tensions (2.7, 4.2 and 7.2 kPa) with either fixed (pHo = 7.44) or concomitant changes in pHo, on contractions induced by depolarization (potassium) or receptor stimulation (prostaglandin F2 alpha) in isolated human pial arteries. Isolated changes in PCO2 had no significant effect on either potency (unchanged EC50 value) or the maximum response (Emax) in potassium-contracted arteries. Hypercapnia with uncompensated pHo significantly decreased both EC50 and Emax values, whereas uncompensated hypocapnia significantly increased the EC50 value without any effect on Emax. Concentration-response curves induced by prostaglandin (PG) F2 alpha were shifted significantly to the right (increased EC50 = decreased potency) during both hypo- and hypercapnia, independent of changes in pHo. The maximal responses were enhanced significantly during hypocapnia (Emax = 110 (SEM 2)%), but this enhancement was converted into a slight attenuation when pHo was compensated (Emax = 92 (4)%). Hypercapnia, with or without compensation of pHo, decreased the Emax values to 69 (16)% and 73 (9)%, respectively. We conclude that hypocapnia increases contractility in human pial arteries--an effect which is reversed by compensation of pHo. In contrast, the hypercapnic decrease of PGF2 alpha-induced contractions appears to be independent of pHo. The results confirm a relationship between contractility and pHo, but do not exclude a direct action of carbon dioxide in receptor-stimulated arteries.}},
  author       = {{Reinstrup, Peter and Uski, Tore and Messeter, Kenneth}},
  issn         = {{1471-6771}},
  keywords     = {{Acid-base equilibrium: pH. Arteries: contractile response; human pial arteries; vascular resistance. Carbon dioxide: tension.}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  number       = {{6}},
  pages        = {{615--620}},
  publisher    = {{Elsevier}},
  series       = {{British Journal of Anaesthesia}},
  title        = {{Modulation by carbon dioxide and pH of the contractile responses to potassium and prostaglandin F2 alpha in isolated human pial arteries}},
  url          = {{http://bja.oxfordjournals.org/cgi/reprint/69/6/615}},
  volume       = {{69}},
  year         = {{1992}},
}