Cardiorespiratory responses to HCl vs. lactic acid infusion
- 1 August 1988
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Physiological Society in Journal of Applied Physiology
- Vol. 65 (2) , 534-540
- https://doi.org/10.1152/jappl.1988.65.2.534
Abstract
Previous reports indicate that intravenous infusion of HCl can alter breathing and blood pressure even if reductions in systemic arterial pH are prevented. To extend these findings, as well as to determine whether other acids elicit comparable results, this report compares the cardiopulmonary response between right atrial infusion of lactic acid and HCl in awake ponies. Lactic acid, infused at a dose of 1.5 mmol/kg over 18 min, lowered systemic and pulmonary arterial pH 0.062 and 0.092 U, respectively, and increased pulmonary arterial pressure (.DELTA.Ppa, 4 mmHg), heart rate (HR, 4/min), and tidal volume (.DELTA.VT, 190 ml/m2). HCl, infused at a reduced dose of 0.5 mmol/kg over 18 min, lowered systemic and pulmonary arterial pH 0.024 and 0.047 U, respectively, but produced increases in Ppa (.DELTA.23 mmHg), (.DELTA.42/min), and VT (.DELTA.321 ml/m2) that were significantly greater than from the larger dose of lactic acid. These results indicate that cardiopulmonary responses to infusion acidosis differ between the type of acid infused. It is suggested that, in the unanesthetized pony, HCl-induced infusion acidosis has a unique cardiopulmonary-stimulating action unrelated to the pH changes imparted to the circulating arterial blood and that this response is absent during the infusion of lactic acid.This publication has 3 references indexed in Scilit:
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- Canine ventilation after acid-base infusions, exercise, and carotid body denervationJournal of Applied Physiology, 1978