Abstract
The etrects of neurolept anaesthesia (NLA) on central circulation, total oxygen uptake and splanchnic cirrulation and oxygen uptake were studied in 12 artificially ventilated dogs, basally anaesthetized with thiopental and nitrous oxide. Hepatic arterial, superior mesenteric arterial and portal venous blood flows were measured with electromagnetic flowmetry. Cardiac output was measured by thermodilution. Determinations of oxygen contents were made in arterial, pulmonary arterial, portal venous and hepatic venous blood. NLA was induced with droperidol 0.5 mg kg‐1 b.w. and fentanyl 0.01 mg kg‐1 b.w. Arterial blood pressure decreased to 63% of control value due to reductions of cardiac output to 78% and of total peripheral vascular resistance to 81% of control values. Hepatic arterial, superior mesenteric arterial and portal venous blood flows all diminished to 75% of control values. Hepatic arterial, superior mesenteric arterial and preportal tissue vascular resistances all decreased. Total oxygen uptake declined to the same extent as cardiac output, leaving the arterio‐venous oxygen difference unchanged. Oxygen uptake of the preportal tissues was unaffected and hepatic oxygen uptake was not significantly reduced, although there were decreases of hepatic oxygen uptake in some of the individual dogs. It is suggested that the cardiovascular depression following NLA was due to adaptation to a lowered total oxygen uptake. It is further concluded that splanchnic circulation was well preserved due to decreases in splanchnic vascular resistances, and that splanchnic oxygen consumption was maintained by means of increased oxygen extraction.

This publication has 58 references indexed in Scilit: