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Cardiovascular and hormonal changes following haemorrhage in the anaesthetized Brattleboro rat with an extracorporeal circulation

✍ Scribed by Fatma Hreash; John F. Laycock


Publisher
Springer
Year
1990
Tongue
English
Weight
571 KB
Volume
417
Category
Article
ISSN
0031-6768

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✦ Synopsis


An extracorporeal circulation technique was developed for use in rats to provide equilibrated blood samples for multiple hormone assays. The inclusion of the extracorporeat circulation did not significantly alter arterial blood pressure, cardiac output, heart rate or central venous pressure in either Brattleboro rats with hereditary diabetes insipidus (BDI) or normal rats of the parent Long Evans (LE) strain. Plasma adrenaline and noradrenaline levels did not alter in either BDI or LE rats following inclusion of the extracorporeal circulation but the vasopressin concentration rose significantly in the LE rats. The impaired recovery of the mean arterial blood pressure following haemorrhage in the BDI rats compared with normal LE animals was not further influenced by the inclusion of the extracorporeal circulation. Plasma vasopressin and adrenaline (but not noradrenaline) levels were significantly raised during, and after, haemorrhage in the LE rats while in the BDI rats only plasma adrenaline levels were significantly increased. These results show that the insertion of an extracorporeal circulation into an anaesthetized BDI or LE rat does not adversely affect the cardiovascular system despite the increase in baseline plasma vasopressin concentration in normal rats, and its subsequent removal provides an additional equilibrated blood sample for multiple hormone assay within the same animal. The increased release of both adrenaline and vasopressin (but not noradrenaline) after haemorrhage in the same animal is detected using this technique, and the importance of vasopressin to the normal recovery process confirmed.