Frontiers in Physiology (Dec 2022)

Dynamics of capillary blood flow responses to acute local changes in oxygen and carbon dioxide concentrations

  • Gaylene M. Russell McEvoy,
  • Brenda N. Wells,
  • Meghan E. Kiley,
  • Kanika K. Kaur,
  • Graham M. Fraser

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fphys.2022.1052449
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13

Abstract

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Objectives: We aimed to quantify the magnitude and time transients of capillary blood flow responses to acute changes in local oxygen concentration ([O2]), and carbon dioxide concentration ([CO2]) in skeletal muscle. Additionally, we sought to quantify the combined response to both low [O2] and high [CO2] to mimic muscle microenvironment changes at the onset of exercise.Methods: 13 Sprague Dawley rats were anaesthetized, mechanically ventilated, and instrumented with indwelling catheters for systemic monitoring. The extensor digitorum longus muscle was blunt dissected, and reflected over a microfluidic gas exchange chamber in the stage of an inverted microscope. Four O2 challenges, four CO2 challenges, and a combined low O2 (7–2%) and high CO2 (5–10%) challenges were delivered to the surface with simultaneous visualization of capillary blood flow responses. Recordings were made for each challenge over a 1-min baseline period followed by a 2-min step change. The combined challenge employed a 1-min [O2] challenge followed by a 2-min change in [CO2]. Mean data for each sequence were fit using least-squared non-linear exponential models to determine the dynamics of each response.Results: 7–2% [O2] challenges decreased capillary RBC saturation within 2 s following the step change (46.53 ± 19.56% vs. 48.51 ± 19.02%, p < 0.0001, τ = 1.44 s), increased RBC velocity within 3 s (228.53 ± 190.39 μm/s vs. 235.74 ± 193.52 μm/s, p < 0.0003, τ = 35.54 s) with a 52% peak increase by the end of the challenge, hematocrit and supply rate show similar dynamics. 5–10% [CO2] challenges increased RBC velocity within 2 s following the step change (273.40 ± 218.06 μm/s vs. 276.75 ± 215.94 μm/s, p = 0.007, τ = 79.34s), with a 58% peak increase by the end of the challenge, supply rate and hematocrit show similar dynamics. Combined [O2] and [CO2] challenges resulted in additive responses to all microvascular hemodynamic measures with a 103% peak velocity increase by the end of the collection period. Data for mean responses and exponential fitting parameters are reported for all challenges.Conclusion: Microvascular level changes in muscle [O2] and [CO2] provoked capillary hemodynamic responses with differing time transients. Simulating exercise via combined [O2] and [CO2] challenges demonstrated the independent and additive nature of local blood flow responses to these agents.

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