Literature DB >> 1551187

Effect of hypertonic sodium chloride (7.5%) on uncontrolled hemorrhage in rats and its interaction with different anesthetic procedures.

M C Bilynskyj1, M L Errington, I T Velasco, M Rocha e Silva.   

Abstract

Small volumes (4-6 ml/kg) of hypertonic NaCl (7.5%, HS) have been shown to correct the hemodynamic alterations caused by severe blood loss, but it has been claimed that its use is detrimental to rats undergoing uncontrolled arterial bleeding. The interaction between uncontrolled hemorrhage and HS was reexamined in experiments performed on male Wistar rats anesthetized with neurolidol-ketamine (NK), pentobarbital (P), chloralose (C), or urethane (U), (n = 20 in each group), half of them treated with HS (4 ml/kg IV) 15 min after start of bleeding. Uncontrolled hemorrhage was induced by cutting the tail at 12% (T12%) or 50% (T50%) from its tip. NK induced large blood loss (T50%, 32.6 ml/kg; T12%, 16.2 ml/kg) and hypotension (T50%, 70 mmHg drop, T12%; 25 mmHg). Mortality was 3/10 (T50%) and 2/10 (T12%). HS produced a significant transient recovery of mean arterial pressure (MAP) and increased blood loss to 38.9 and 21.8 ml/kg for T50% and T12% respectively, but mortality was not significantly different (T50%, 5/10; T12%, 3/10). The other three anesthetics with a T50% cut produced mild blood loss and slight hypotension, unaffected by HS. Only three of 60 rats died under these anesthetics (two HS, one untreated). In a supplementary P-anesthetized group (P-MIMIC), blood was forcibly removed from a large artery to mimic the loss observed in the NK-T50% group. Hypotension and death rates in P-MIMIC (four HS, one control) were comparable to those observed in NK-T50%. It is concluded that the effects of NK are probably due to its powerful vasodilator effect, apparently sufficient to impede the normal vasoconstrictor response to shock.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  1992        PMID: 1551187

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Circ Shock        ISSN: 0092-6213


  2 in total

Review 1.  Does animal experimentation inform human healthcare? Observations from a systematic review of international animal experiments on fluid resuscitation.

Authors:  Ian Roberts; Irene Kwan; Phillip Evans; Steven Haig
Journal:  BMJ       Date:  2002-02-23

2.  Isotonic saline resuscitation in uncontrolled hemorrhage under various anesthetic conditions.

Authors:  D M Soucy; J F Sindlinger; S P Greene; A E Barber; H P Illner; G T Shires
Journal:  Ann Surg       Date:  1995-07       Impact factor: 12.969

  2 in total

北京卡尤迪生物科技股份有限公司 © 2022-2023.