Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
2847121 Respiratory Physiology & Neurobiology 2014 8 Pages PDF
Abstract

•A noninvasive rebreathing method is developed to measure lung function in conscious rats.•Alveolar microvascular reserves are assessed from the pulmonary diffusing capacity-to-perfusion relationship.•Small animals show reduced microvascular reserves compared to large species.•Rats with metabolic syndrome show greater age-exacerbated loss of alveolar microvascular reserves.

Recruitment of alveolar microvascular reserves, assessed from the relationship between pulmonary diffusing capacity (DLCO) and perfusion (Q˙c), is critical to the maintenance of arterial blood oxygenation. Leptin-resistant ZDF fatty diabetic (fa/fa) rats exhibit restricted cardiopulmonary physiology under anesthesia. To assess alveolar microvascular function in conscious, non-sedated, non-instrumented, and minimally restrained animals, we adapted a rebreathing technique to study fa/fa and control non-diabetic (+/+) rats (4–5 and 7–11 mo old) at rest and during mild spontaneous activity. Measurements included O2 uptake, lung volume, Q˙c, DLCO, membrane diffusing capacity (DMCO), capillary blood volume (Vc) and septal tissue-blood volume. In older fa/fa than +/+ animals, DLCO and DMCO at a given Q˙c were lower; Vc was reduced in proportion to Q˙c. Results demonstrate the consequences of alveolar microangiopathy in the metabolic syndrome: lung volume restriction, reduced Q˙c, and elevated membrane resistance to diffusion. At a given Q˙c, DLCO is lower in rats and guinea pigs than dogs or humans, consistent with limited alveolar microvascular reserves in small animals.

Related Topics
Life Sciences Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology Physiology
Authors
, , , , ,