Abstract

Susceptibility to chronic hypoxia in the form of siimulated high altitude (HA) have been compared in the adult male Hilltop (H) and Madison (M) Sprague-Dawley rats in terms of their metabolic, hematological and cardiopulmonary responses. Following exposure to either 18 000 or 20 000 ft for 30–40 days, 60–70% of the H rats died or became obviously morbid in contrast to a total absence of morbidity or mortality in the M rats. Autopsy of dead and morbid H rats revealed abdominal and pleural effusions. Oxygen consumption remained normal in both H and M rats. Hematocrits were slightly higher in the H rats than in the M rats. The lungs of both strains were hypertrophied but they showed no evidence of edema or gross lesions. The peak right ventricular pressures of the H and M strains were 73.6 ± 7.4 and 49.5 ± 6.5 mm Hg (mean ± SD), respectively. The percent increase in total ventricular, right and left ventricular weights per 100 g body weights in the H rats were 80, 300 and 30, respectively, as compared to 20, 200 and 0 in the M rats. These changes suggest that the greater susceptability to chronic HA exposure observed in the H rats is related to a more severe right ventricular overloading and perhaps failure, secondary to a more extreme pulmonary hypertension.

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