Abstract

Although fetal asphyxia, i.e. hypoxemia, acidosis, and hypercapnia, increases plasma arginine vasopressin (AVP) greater than 40-fold, hypoxemia and metabolic acidosis occurring independently cause only 5-fold and 2-fold increases, respectively. To determine the effects of hypercapnia on AVP release, we examined the effects of acute hypercapnia on AVP secretion in six pregnant sheep and their fetuses at 135 +/- 4 d (chi +/- SD), exposing the ewe successively to room air, 30% O2, 30% O2 plus 10% CO2, 30% O2, and room air, and monitoring uterine blood flow, as well as maternal and fetal mean arterial pressure, heart rate, arterial blood gases, and plasma AVP and catecholamines. Oxygen exposure had no effect on the ewe or fetus. During O2 plus CO2 exposure, the ewes and fetuses developed hypercapnia in the absence of hypoxia, arterial CO2 tension increasing to 8.38 +/- 0.87 kPa (62.9 +/- 6.5 mm Hg) and 10.0 +/- 0.61 kPa (75.2 +/- 4.6 mm Hg) (p less than 0.001), respectively, at 30 min of exposure. Although fetal heart rate and mean arterial pressure were unchanged, maternal values rose 61 and 30% (p less than 0.001), respectively. At 30 min of O2 + CO2 exposure, maternal norepinephrine increased from 2.23 +/- 0.74 to 8.52 +/- 3.97 nmol/L (p = 0.15) and fetal epinephrine increased from 0.27 +/- 0.10 to 2.271 +/- 0.90 nmol/L (p = 0.01); plasma AVP was not significantly increased in the ewe or fetus, although levels rose from approximately 45 to 127 +/- 48 and 137 +/- 64 pmol/L (p = 0.10), respectively.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)

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