| Literature DB >> 30459408 |
Eva Maria Greunz1, Catherine Williams2,3, Steffen Ringgaard4, Kasper Hansen3, Tobias Wang3,5, Mads Frost Bertelsen2.
Abstract
Inhalant anesthesia is challenging in chelonians due to a great capacity for breath-holding and an incomplete separation of the cardiac ventricle. Deoxygenated blood can recirculate back into systemic circulation by bypassing the lung in a process referred to as intracardiac right to left (R-L) shunting. Via electrocardiogram gated magnetic resonance imaging, a novel modality to investigate arterial flows in reptiles, intracardiac shunting and its elimination via atropine during gas anesthesia in tortoises (Chelonoidis carbonaria) was demonstrated. The great vessels of the heart were visualized confirming that after shunt-elimination, the flow (mean ± sd) in the pulmonary arteries increased significantly (54.6 ± 9.5 mL min-1 kg-1 vs 10.8 ± 3.4 mL min-1 kg-1; P < 0.008). Consequently, animals required significantly lower concentrations of inhaled anesthetics to maintain a stable anesthesia. To that end, the minimum anesthetic concentration (MAC) of isoflurane needed to maintain surgical anesthesia was measured. A significantly lower MAC was found after administration of atropine (mean MAC ± sd 2.2 ± 0.3% vs 3.2 ± 0.4%; P < 0.002). Previously, MAC has been indeterminable in chelonians likely due to intracardiac shunting, so this report constitutes the first MAC study performed in a tortoise.Entities:
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Year: 2018 PMID: 30459408 PMCID: PMC6244002 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-018-35588-w
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1The panel shows systemic (SF, grey) and pulmonary flow (PF, black) (mean ± sd) in five red footed tortoises under isoflurane anesthesia after atropine or saline injection. The pulmonary flow was significantly higher (P < 0.008) with atropine, whereas the systemic flow did not differ. The significant difference (P < 0.05) is indicated with an asterisk (*).
Figure 2The panel shows flow profiles (mL sec−1) in the outflow tract over the cardiac cycle (time in ms), in one individual following injection of saline (left hand panel), and atropine (right hand panel). Vessels shown: left pulmonary artery (blue), right pulmonary artery (red), two branches of the right aorta (light and dark green), and left aorta (yellow). There was a significantly higher flow in the pulmonary arteries after atropine treatment during gas anesthesia. Significant differences (P < 0.05) are indicated with an asterisk (*).
Figure 3(A) The cardiac landmark for flow determination of the long axis view at its peak systole in the magnetic resonance image. The measured distance (red line) from the valve to the cross section slice was used for the flow measurements. (B) Cross section of the tortoise and of the cardiac outflow tract used for flow determination. In this animal, the vessels for flow determinations used were the right aorta which is already branched (1, 4), the left pulmonary artery (3), left aorta (2) and the right pulmonary artery (5).