Intracellular and Extracellular Acid-Base Status and H+ Exchange with the Environment After Exhaustive Exercise in the Rainbow Trout
Open Access
- 1 July 1986
- journal article
- research article
- Published by The Company of Biologists in Journal of Experimental Biology
- Vol. 123 (1) , 93-121
- https://doi.org/10.1242/jeb.123.1.93
Abstract
Exhaustive exercise induced a severe short-lived (0–1 h) respiratory, and longer-lived (0–4 h) metabolic, acidosis in the extracellular fluid of the rainbow trout. Blood ‘lactate’ load exceeded blood ‘metabolic acid’ load from 1–12 h after exercise. Over-compensation occurred, so that by 8–12 h, metabolic alkalosis prevailed, but by 24 h, resting acid-base status had been restored. Acid-base changes were similar, and lactate levels identical, in arterial and venous blood. However, at rest venous RBC pHi was significantly higher than arterial (7.42 versus 7.31). After exercise, arterial RBC pHi remained constant, whereas venous RBC pHi fell significantly (to 7.18) but was fully restored by 1 h. Resting mean whole-body pHi, measured by DMO distribution, averaged approx. 7.25 at a pHe of approx. 7.82 and fell after exercise to a low of 6.78 at a pHe of approx. 7.30. Whole-body pHi was slower to recover than pHe, requiring up to 12 h, with no subsequent alkalosis. Whole-body ECFV decreased by about 70 ml kg-1 due to a fluid shift into the ICF. Net H+ excretion to the water increased 1 h after exercise accompanied by an elevation in ammonia efflux. At 8–12 h, H+ excretion was reduced to resting levels and at 12–24 h, a net H+ uptake occurred. Lactate excretion amounted to approx. 1% of the net H+ excretion and only approx. 2% of the whole blood load. Only a small amount of the anaerobically produced H+ in the ICF appeared in the ECF and subsequently in the water. By 24 h, all the H+ excreted had been taken back up, thus correcting the extracellular alkalosis. The bulk of the H+ load remained intracellular, to be cleared by aerobic metabolism.This publication has 50 references indexed in Scilit:
- The influence of exercise–handling stress on blood lactate, acid–base, and plasma glucose status of northern pike (Esox lucius L.)Canadian Journal of Zoology, 1985
- The mechanisms of acid-base and ionoregulation in the freshwater rainbow trout during environmental hyperoxia and subsequent normoxia. I. Extra- and intracellular acid-base statusRespiration Physiology, 1984
- Branchial ion exchange and acid-base regulation after strenuous exercise in rainbow trout (Salmo gairdneri)Respiration Physiology, 1983
- Transepithelial ion transfer processes as mechanisms for fish acid–base regulation in hypercapnia and lactacidosisCanadian Journal of Zoology, 1982
- Oxygen transport and acid-base balance in the blood of the sheatfish, Silurus glanisRespiration Physiology, 1981
- Intracellular ph in cold-blooded vertebrates as a function of body temperatureRespiration Physiology, 1976
- Hydrogen ion ballance in the elasmobranch Scyliorhinus stellaris after exhausting activityRespiration Physiology, 1972
- The Effect of Intermittent Exercise on Carbohydrate Metabolism in Rainbow Trout,Salmo gairdneriJournal of the Fisheries Research Board of Canada, 1966
- Physiological Salines for Fresh-Water TeleostsThe Progressive Fish-Culturist, 1963
- Changes in pH, Carbonate and Lactate of the Blood of Yearling Kamloops Trout,Salmo gairdneri, During and Following Severe Muscular ActivityJournal of the Fisheries Research Board of Canada, 1959