Abstract

We studied the role of the sympathetic nervous system in the augmented vasoconstrictor response of the newborn lamb, compared with the adult sheep, by producing a chemical sympathectomy with 6-hydroxydopamine (6-OHDA). Seven lambs, age 4-16 days, and five sheep, age 2 yr, were anesthetized and intubated with a double-lumen endotracheal tube, allowing ventilation of one lung with O2 to maintain systemic oxygenation while the contralateral lung was ventilated with N2 as a hypoxic challenge. Distribution of perfusion to each lung was evaluated using positron scintigraphy after inferior vena caval injections of 13N, a positron-emitting isotope. In the lambs, prior to 6-OHDA, distribution of perfusion to the test lung was 43 +/- 3% of total lung perfusion during bilateral O2 ventilation and fell with hypoxia to 24 +/- 2%, a reduction of 44 +/- 3% during N2 ventilation as compared with O2 ventilation. After 6-OHDA, hypoxic challenge reduced perfusion by only 22 +/- 2% (P less than 0.01 compared with pre-6-OHDA). In the adult sheep, hypoxic vasoconstriction reduced perfusion to the test lung by 28 +/- 2% but was unaffected by 6-OHDA. Absence of rise in pulmonary vascular resistance (PVR) or femoral artery pressure (Pfa) in response to Tyramine infusions after 6-OHDA confirmed complete sympathectomy in lambs and sheep. Persistent increases in PVR and Pfa to infusions of prostaglandin F2 alpha before and after 6-OHDA showed that the loss of alveolar hypoxic vasoconstriction in the lamb was specific. Thus sympathetic innervation may contribute to the greater strength of alveolar hypoxic vasoconstriction found in lambs than in sheep.

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