Abstract

This study evaluated the hypothesis that the sympathetic nervous system was one of the factors increasing the heterogeneity of cerebrocortical venous O2 saturation and this heterogeneity would be greater during hypoxia when cervical sympathetic activity was elevated. Thirty-two male Long-Evans rats were either sham operated (n = 16) or received bilateral cervical sympathectomy (n = 16). One-half of the animals (n = 8) in each treatment were challenged by hypoxia (8% O2 in N2). Cerebral blood flow was determined in five brain regions with [14C]iodoantipyrine. Oxygen saturation was measured microspectrophotometrically in small cerebrocortical arteries and veins. The degree of hypoxic hyperemia was not significantly different between sham-operated and sympathectomized rats. Cortical venous O2 saturations, indicating the balance between O2 supply and consumption, were significantly more heterogeneous in the sham-operated group under both normoxic and hypoxic conditions. The coefficient of variation (CV = 100 x SD/mean) for the normoxic sham-operated animals was 24.9% and the average venous O2 saturation was 53.8%. During hypoxia, venous O2 saturation was significantly decreased to 43.1% without a change in CV (24.5%). Sympathectomy significantly reduced this heterogeneity through a reduction in the number of low O2 saturation veins (CV = 13.2%) under normoxic conditions and the effect was similar under hypoxic conditions (CV = 15.3%). In both sham-operated and sympathectomized groups, hypoxia elicited a significantly higher cerebrocortical O2 consumption. Thus, bilateral cervical sympathectomy improved the O2 supply in selective cerebrocortical regions with high O2 extraction. However, the effect of sympathetic innervation on the heterogeneity of cerebrocortical venous O2 saturation was not potentiated by hypoxia.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)

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