Abstract

The pulmonary hypertensive response to chronic hypoxia varies markedly among mammalian species. An explanation for this variability was sought by exposing seven species to hypobaric hypoxia (PB equal to 435 mmHg) for 19-48 days. Control animals were studied at 1,600 m (PB equal to 630 mmHg). The pulmonary hypertension that developed varied in the following order of decreasing severity: calf and pig (severe); rat and rabbit (moderate); sheep, guinea pig, and dog (mild). Right ventricular hypertrophy developed in proportion to the elevation in right ventricular systolic pressure. These interspecies variations in response were not correlated with the degree of arterial hypoxemia, degree of polycythemia, elevation in heart rate, or postnatal age. However, the medial thickness of the small pulmonary arteries in control animals was highly correlated with the development of pulmonary hypertension and right ventricular hypertrophy in hypoxic animals. Thus, the amount of lung vascular smooth muscle inherent within each species is a major determinant of the pulmonary hypertensive response to high altitude and contributes to the interspecies variability in this response.

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