Abstract
Cardio-pulmonary function was measured in male broilers reared on diets formulated to contain 1.5% arginine (NORMAL group) or 2.5% arginine (ARGININE group). A snare placed around the right pulmonary artery permitted acute shunting of the entire cardiac output (CO) through the left pulmonary artery, resulting in sustained increases in blood flow (BF) through the left lung in both groups. The unilateral increase in BF was accompanied by sustained increases in pulmonary arterial pressure (PAP) and pulmonary vascular resistance (PVR) in the NORMAL group. However, following initial transient increases in PAP and PVR in the ARGININE group, subsequent pulmonary vasodilation gradually reduced PVR, and thus PAP, in spite of the ongoing elevation in BF through the left lung. The capacity of the pulmonary vasculature in the ARGININE group to accommodate an increased BF at a normal PAP accounts for the previously reported lower incidence of pulmonary hypertension syndrome (PHS, ascites) in cold-stressed broilers fed supplemental dietary arginine. Hypoxemia and respiratory acidosis ensued rapidly in both groups after tightening the pulmonary artery snare, in spite of a compensatory increase in the respiratory rate. The gradual return of PVR and PAP to presnare levels in the ARGININE group did not eliminate the concurrent ventilation-perfusion mismatch caused by the increased rate of BF through the left lung. Tightening the pulmonary artery snare caused mean systemic arterial pressure (MAP) to drop from control levels of approximately 98 mm Hg to sustained hypotensive levels of approximately 65 mm Hg in both groups. This systemic hypotension was caused by decreases in CO and total peripheral resistance (TPR). The reductions in CO were caused by reductions in stroke volume (SV) rather than heart rate (HR), suggesting that acutely tightening the pulmonary artery snare increased PVR sufficiently to impede left ventricular filling. Accordingly, the maximum increment in PAP attainable by the right ventricle during acute increases in PVR apparently was inadequate to propel the entire CO through the pulmonary vasculature, setting the stage for the congestive right-sided pooling of blood routinely associated with PHS in broilers.
Published Version
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