trans-sodium-crocetinate and Hypercapnia

trans-sodium-crocetinate has been researched along with Hypercapnia* in 1 studies

Other Studies

1 other study(ies) available for trans-sodium-crocetinate and Hypercapnia

ArticleYear
Sodium crocetinate does not alter gut hypercapnic responses or renal energy stores during transient sub-diaphragmatic ischaemia.
    Intensive care medicine, 2003, Volume: 29, Issue:4

    To evaluate the protection afforded by trans-sodium crocetinate against dysoxia in an animal model of recurrent sub-diaphragmatic ischaemia.. Prospective experimental animal study.. University research laboratory. Adult male Sprague-Dawley rats.. Twelve adult male Sprague-Dawley rats (340-510 g) were anaesthetised with sodium pentobarbitone 60 mg/kg i.p. and ventilated with oxygen and isoflurane via tracheostomy. Six 2-min episodes of sub-diaphragmatic hypotension (mean pressure 30 mmHg) were induced using a sling around the proximal aorta. Before the third and sixth episodes, saline 1.5 ml/kg was injected into the aortic cannula. In six rats, this saline contained trans-sodium crocetinate 50 microg/ml.. Ileal luminal PCO(2) and distal aortic pressure were monitored continuously. Following ischaemic episodes trans-sodium crocetinate had no discernible effect on either degree of PCO(2) elevation or the time to peak PCO(2). No effects on renal energy charge or nucleotide concentrations were detected. UV-visible spectroscopy of the crocetinate preparation showed that some cis isomer was present.. The findings, although limited to one drug dosage in one animal model, bring into question whether trans-sodium crocetinate affects plasma oxygen diffusivity in vivo. Alternative explanations for the negative findings include a TSC-induced exacerbation of arterio-venous oxygen shunting, the brevity of the dysoxic episodes, and the presence of cis isomer.

    Topics: Animals; Carbon Dioxide; Carotenoids; Disease Models, Animal; Hypercapnia; Intestinal Mucosa; Ischemia; Kidney; Male; Prospective Studies; Rats; Rats, Sprague-Dawley; Vitamin A

2003