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Hyperbaric ethanol antagonism in mice: Studies on oxygen, nitrogen, strain and sex

✍ Scribed by Ronald L. Alkana; Richard D. Malcolm


Book ID
104772366
Publisher
Springer
Year
1982
Tongue
English
Weight
660 KB
Volume
77
Category
Article
ISSN
0033-3158

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✦ Synopsis


Male and female C57BL/6J and male BALBc/J mice were injected with 3.6 g/kg ethanol or saline and exposed to 1-10 atmospheres absolute (ATA) air, to 1 ATA 80 helium-20% oxygen, or to 12ATA helium-oxygen having oxygen partial pressures between 0.5 and 18 times normal. Hyperbaric helium-oxygen significantly reduced sleep-time and increased wake-up brain ethanol concentrations in all mice tested. The degree of antagonism was not enhanced by increasing the oxygen partial pressure. Hyperbaric air increased sleep-time and decreased wake-up brain ethanol concentration in C57 mice. Hyperbaric air induced a pressure-related lethal effect beginning at 6ATA in intoxicated BALBs. These findings demonstrate that hyperbaric ethanol antagonism extends across strains and sexes, that the degree of antagonism cannot be enhanced by increasing the oxygen partial pressure, and that air is not suitable as an antagonistic hyperbaric gas. The findings are consistent with membrane theories of anesthesia.