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Query: UMLS:C0020440 (hypercapnia)
7,939 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Intramuscular (m. quadriceps) contents of electrolytes, free amino acids and energy-rich phosphagens were determined in 12 patients (51--81 years of age) with moderate chronic obstructive lung disease. At the time of the study the patients were in their habitual condition. After an overnight rest, 8 patients showed hypoxia and five of these also hypercapnia. Compared to apparently healthy controls of similar age and studied under identical conditions, the patients had increased intramuscular concentrations of sodium, chloride and extracellular water, whereas magnesium was slightly reduced. ATP and phosphocreatine, as well as the ATP/ADP and phosphocreatine/total creatine ratios, were reduced. The ATP/ADP ratio correlated significantly to intracellular magnesium. Plasma amino acids were essentially similar in controls and patients but the intramuscular contents of essential amino acids and of the three branched-chain amino acids were slightly enhanced in the patients.
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PMID:Energy-rich phosphagens, electrolytes and free amino acids in leg skeletal muscle of patients with chronic obstructive lung disease. 708 Aug 63

The effects of intravenously administered lidocaine on the cerebral cortical energy state and glycolytic metabolism were studied in rats. In one series, rats were divided into five groups according to EEG patterns, i.e., control, desynchronized, synchronized, seizure (1-min duration) and recovery groups. With lidocaine infusion (0.75 mg/min), there were no significant changes from the control group in the cerebral energy state except for a modest increase in phosphocreatine (PCr) in the seizure group and a small decrease in ADP in the non-seizure groups. The cerebral energy charge remained unchanged. Lactate and pyruvate significantly decreased in the non-seizure groups. In a second series, rats were divided into five groups, i.e., control, lidocaine seizure groups (5-min duration, 1.5 mg/min) at hypocapnia, normocapnia and hypercapnia, and a bicuculline (1.2 mg/kg) seizure group. The metabolic changes during lidocaine seizure were essentially the same as those observed in the seizure group in the first series. However, the increase in PCr during lidocaine seizure was significant only in the hypocapnic and the normocapnic groups. Bicuculline-induced seizures were accompanied by a significant decrease in high energy phosphates. In summary, neither a non-seizure nor-seizure dose of lidocaine caused any reduction in the cerebral energy charge nor was there any evidence of increased anaerobic metabolism in the cerebral cortex during lidocaine-induced seizures.
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PMID:Cerebral energy state and glycolytic metabolism during lidocaine infusion in the rat. 721 27

This study explores the influence of severe lactic acidosis in the ischemic rat brain on postischemic recovery of the tissue energy state and neurophysiological parameters. Severe incomplete brain ischemia (cerebral blood flow below 5% of normal) was induced by bilateral carotid artery clamping combined with hypovolemic hypotension. We varied the production of lactate in the tissue by manipulating the blood glucose concentrations. A 30-min period of incomplete ischemia induced in food-deprived animals caused lactate to accumulate to 15-16 mumol g-1 in cortical tissue. Upon recirculation these animals showed: (1) a considerable recovery of the cortical energy state as evaluated from the tissue concentrations of phosphocreatine, ATP, ADP, and AMP; and (2) return of spontaneous electrocortical activity as well as of somatosensory evoked response (SER). In contrast, administration of glucose to food-deprived animals prior to ischemia caused an increase in tissue lactate concentration to about 35 mumol g-1. These animals did not recover energy balance in the tissue and neurophysiological functions did not return. In other experiments the production of lactate during 30 min of complete compression ischemia was increased from about 12 mumol g-1 (normoglycemic animals) to 20-30 mumol g-1 by preischemic hyperglycemia and, in separate animals, combined hypercapnia. The recovery of the cortical energy state upon recirculation was significantly poorer in hyperglycemic animals. It is concluded that a high degree of tissue lactic acidosis during brain ischemia impairs postischemic recovery and that different degrees of tissue lactic acidosis may explain why severe incomplete ischemia, in certain experimental models, is more deleterious than complete brain ischemia.
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PMID:Brain lactic acidosis and ischemic cell damage: 1. Biochemistry and neurophysiology. 732 45

Previously we have shown that hypercarbia produces a larger decrease in agonal glycolytic rate in 1-month-old swine than in newborns. In an effort to understand the mechanism responsible for this difference, we tested the hypothesis that hypercarbia produces age-related changes in the concentration of one or more effectors of phosphofructokinase activity. Specifically, in vivo 31P and 1H NMR spectroscopy was used to compare changes in lactate levels, intracellular pH, free magnesium concentration, and content of phosphorylated metabolites for these two age groups at three intervals during the first 1.5 min of complete ischemia in the presence or absence of hypercarbia (PaCO2 = 102-106 mm Hg). Hypercarbia produced the same drop in intracellular brain pH for both age groups, but the decrease in phosphocreatine level and increase in inorganic phosphate content were greater in 1-month-olds compared with newborns. During ischemia there was no difference between the magnitude of change in intracellular pH and levels of phosphocreatine and inorganic phosphate in hypercarbic 1-month-olds versus newborns. Under control conditions, i.e., normocarbia and normoxia, the free Mg2+ concentration was lower and the fraction of magnesium-free ATP was higher for newborns than 1-month-olds. However, there was no change in these variables for either age group during hypercarbia and early during ischemia. Thus, age-related differences in the relative decrease in agonal glycolytic rate during hypercarbia could not be explained by differences in intracellular pH, inorganic phosphate content, or free magnesium concentration. The [ADP]free at control was higher in newborns compared with 1-month-olds, and there was no age-related difference in [AMP]free. These variables did not change for newborns when exposed to hypercarbia, but for 1-month-olds [ADP]free and [AMP]free increased during hypercarbia relative to control values. High-energy phosphate utilization during ischemia for hypercarbic 1-month-olds was reduced by 74% compared with normocarbic 1-month-olds during ischemia, whereas the reduction in energy utilization (14%) was not significant for hypercarbic versus normocarbic newborns during ischemia.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
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PMID:Evaluation of potential effectors of agonal glycolytic rate in developing brain measured in vivo by 31P and 1H nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy. 779 28

Studies of skinned fibers suggest that the rate of ATP turnover in skeletal muscle is depressed by acidosis. To examine whether this occurs in intact muscles, the ATP cost of isometric contractions was measured in ex vivo, arterially perfused cat biceps (predominantly fast-twitch) and soleus (slow-twitch) muscles under normocapnic (5% CO2) and hypercapnic (70% CO2) conditions. Hypercapnia decreased extracellular pH from 7.4 to 6.7 and intracellular pH from 7.1 to 6.5 (soleus) or 6.6 (biceps) but had no significant effect on the phosphocreatine (PCr)-to-ATP ratio in muscles at rest. The ATP cost of contraction was estimated from PCr changes, measured by gating the acquisition of 31P-nuclear magnetic resonance spectra to times before and after brief tetani (1 s at 100 Hz and 2 s at 25 Hz for biceps and soleus, respectively) or 10-s trains of twitches (2 and 1 Hz, respectively). Peak isometric force and the ATP cost of tetanic contraction (PCr/force x time integral) were not significantly different under hypercapnic compared with normocapnic conditions in either muscle (mean: 7.97 and 2.44 micromol x kg(-1) x s(-1) for biceps and soleus, respectively). Twitch force and the ATP cost per twitch decreased by nearly 50% during hypercapnic perfusion in both muscle types. The results indicate that hypercapnic acidosis has no significant effect on the ATPase rate per active myosin head in intact mammalian skeletal muscle.
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PMID:Acidosis has no effect on the ATP cost of contraction in cat fast- and slow-twitch skeletal muscles. 912 91

The relationships between oxygen consumption (Q(O2)) and calculated cytoplasmic ADP concentration ([ADP]) and the free energy of ATP hydrolysis (deltaG(ATP)) were examined in ex vivo arterially perfused cat soleus muscles during repetitive twitch stimulation under normocapnic (5% CO2) and hypercapnic (70% CO2) conditions. Hypercapnia decreased extra- and intracellular pH by over 0.5 but had no significant effect on Q(O2) or phosphocreatine (PCr)/ATP in muscles at rest. The maximum Q(O2) measured during stimulation and the rate constant for PCr recovery after stimulation both decreased during hypercapnic compared with normocapnic perfusion, but the estimated ATP/O2 was unchanged. The change in PCr and deltaG(ATP) with increasing Q(O2) was greater during hypercapnic compared with normocapnic stimulation, as expected from the decrease in maximum Q(O2). However, the relationships between Q(O2) and [ADP] and deltaG(ATP) were both shifted to the left during hypercapnia compared with normocapnia. The results show that changes in cytoplasmic adenine nucleotides and phosphate are not sufficient to explain the control of respiration in skeletal muscle. However, in the context of thermodynamic models of respiratory control, the results can be explained by increased intramitochondrial potential for ATP synthesis at low pH.
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PMID:Effect of acidosis on control of respiration in skeletal muscle. 912 92

We previously have demonstrated that hypocapnia aggravates and hypercapnia protects the immature rat from hypoxic-ischemic brain damage. To ascertain cerebral blood flow (CBF) and metabolic correlates, 7-d postnatal rats were subjected to hypoxia-ischemia during which they were rendered either hypo-(3.5 kPa), normo- (5.1 kPa), or hypercapnic (7.3 kPa) by the inhalation of either 0, 3, or 6% CO2, 8% O2, balance N2. CBF during hypoxia-ischemia was better preserved in the normo- and hypercapnic rat pups; these animals also exhibited a stimulation of cerebral glucose utilization. Brain glucose concentrations were higher and lactate lower in the normo- and hypercapnic animals, indicating that glucose was consumed oxidatively in these groups rather than by anaerobic glycolysis, as apparently occurred in the hypocapnic animals. ATP and phosphocreatine were better preserved in the normo- and hypercapnic rats compared with the hypocapnic animals. Cerebrospinal fluid glutamate, as a reflection of the brain extracellular fluid concentration, was lowest in the hypercapnic rats at 2 h of hypoxia-ischemia. The data indicate that during hypoxia-ischemia in the immature rat, CBF is better preserved during normo- and hypercapnia; the greater oxygen delivery promotes cerebral glucose utilization and oxidative metabolism for optimal maintenance of tissue high energy phosphate reserves. An inhibition of glutamate secretion into the synaptic cleft and its attenuation of N-methyl-D-aspartate receptor activation would further protect the hypercapnic animal from hypoxic-ischemic brain damage.
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PMID:Effect of carbon dioxide on cerebral metabolism during hypoxia-ischemia in the immature rat. 921 33

A unique method for simultaneously measuring interstitial (pHe) as well as intracellular (pHi) pH in the brains of lightly anesthetized rats is described. A 4-mm microdialysis probe was inserted acutely into the right frontal lobe in the center of the area sampled by a surface coil tuned for the collection of 31P-NMR spectra. 2-Deoxyglucose 6-phosphate (2-DG-6-P) was microdialyzed into the rat until a single NMR peak was detected in the phosphomonoester region of the 31P spectrum. pHe and pHi values were calculated from the chemical shift of 2-DG-6-P and inorganic phosphate, respectively, relative to the phosphocreatine peak. The average in vivo pHe was 7.24+/-0.01, whereas the average pHi was 7.05+/-0.01 (n = 7). The average pHe value and the average CSF bicarbonate value (23.5+/-0.1 mEq/L) were used to calculate an interstitial Pco2 of 55 mm Hg. Rats were then subjected to a 15-min period of either hypercapnia, by addition of CO2 (2.5, 5, or 10%) to the ventilator gases, or hypocapnia (PCO2 < 30 mm Hg), by increasing the ventilation rate and volume. pHe responded inversely to arterial Pco2 and was well described (r2 = 0.91) by the Henderson-Hasselbalch equation, assuming a pKa for the bicarbonate buffer system of 6.1 and a solubility coefficient for CO2 of 0.031. This confirms the view that the bicarbonate buffer system is dominant in the interstitial space. pHi responded inversely and linearly to arterial PCO2. The intracellular effect was muted as compared with pHe (slope = -0.0025, r2 = 0.60). pHe and pHi values were also monitored during the first 12 min of ischemia produced by cardiac arrest. pHe decreases more rapidly than pHi during the first 5 min of ischemia. After 12 min of ischemia, pHe and pHi values were not significantly different (6.44+/-0.02 and 6.44+/-0.03, respectively). The limitations, advantages, and future uses of the combined microdialysis/31P-NMR method for measurement of pHe and pHi are discussed.
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PMID:In vivo microdialysis of 2-deoxyglucose 6-phosphate into brain: a novel method for the measurement of interstitial pH using 31P-NMR. 988 94

Diaphragm fatigue may contribute to respiratory failure. (31)P-nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy is a useful tool to assess energetic changes within the diaphragm during fatigue, as indicated by P(i) accumulation and phosphocreatine (PCr) depletion. We hypothesized that loaded breathing during hypoxia would lead to diaphragm fatigue and inadequate aerobic metabolism. Seven piglets were anesthetized by using halothane inhalation. Diaphragmatic contractility was assessed by transdiaphragmatic pressure (Pdi) at end expiration with the airway occluded. A nuclear magnetic resonance surface coil placed under the right hemidiaphragm measured P(i) and PCr during four conditions: control, inspiratory resistive breathing (IRB), IRB with hypoxia, and recovery (IRB without hypoxia). IRB alone resulted in hypercarbia (32 +/- 7 to 61 +/- 21 Torr) and respiratory acidosis but no change in diaphragm force output or aerobic metabolism. Combined IRB and hypoxia resulted in decreased force output (Pdi decreased by 40%; from 30 +/- 17 to 19 +/- 11 mmHg) and evidence of metabolic stress (ratio of P(i) to PCr increased by 290%; from 0.19 +/- 0.09 to 0.74 +/- 0.27). We conclude that diaphragm fatigue associated with inadequate aerobic oxidative metabolism occurs in the setting of loaded breathing and hypoxia. Conversely, aerobic metabolism and force output of the diaphragm remain unchanged from control during loaded normoxic or hyperoxic breathing despite the onset of respiratory failure.
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PMID:Effects of loaded breathing and hypoxia on diaphragm metabolism as measured by (31)P-NMR spectroscopy. 1071 Mar 88

Although information on energy metabolism during hypoxemic-ischemic states is abundant, data on perinatal asphyxia (PA) are limited. As results from hypoxia-ischemia cannot be directly extrapolated to PA, a clinical entity characterized by acidosis, hypoxemia and hypercapnia, we decided to use a rat model of graded PA during delivery. Cesarean section was performed at the 21st day of gestation and the pups, still in the uterus horns, were asphyxiated from 0 to 20 minutes. In this model survival decreases with the length of asphyxia. Early changes of energy-rich phosphates in brain, heart and kidney were determined by HPLC. ATP and phosphocreatine gradually decreased with the length of asphyxia, with highest ATP depletion rate occurring in the kidney. ATP: brain 1.39 +/- 0.71 (0 min) to 0.06 microM/g wwt (20 min); heart 4.73 +/- 0.34 (0 min) to 1.08 +/- 0.47 (20 min); kidney 1.62 +/- 0.11 (0 min) to 0.02 +/- 0.02 (20 min). Phosphocreatine: brain 1.65 +/- 0.68 (0 min) to 0.51 +/- 0.45 microM/g (20 min); heart 6.98 +/- 0.38 (0 min) to 6.17 +/- 1.07 (20 min); kidney 8.23 +/- 0.86 (0 min) to 3.76 +/- 0.54 (20 min). We present data on energy derangement in a rat model of PA, closely resembling the clinical situation, showing that energy depletion precedes cell damage and death.
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PMID:Energy metabolism in graded perinatal asphyxia of the rat. 1100 52


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