Stroke, Vol 15, 129-133, Copyright © 1984 by American Heart Association
WE Hoffman, RF Albrecht and DJ Miletich
Cerebrovascular responses of young and aged rats were tested to graded
levels of hypoxia using a modification of the Levine ischemic-hypoxic rat
model in which one carotid artery was ligated. Rats were anesthetized with
70% N2O, 30% O2 and cortical and subcortical cerebral blood flow (CBF) were
measured with radioactive microspheres. CBF and cerebral cortical oxygen
consumption (CMRO2) were measured under control conditions and during
hypoxia with arterial oxygen content maintained at approximately 9, 5 and 3
ml . dl-1. CBF responses in cortical and subcortical tissues were similar
between young and aged under control conditions and during moderate hypoxia
(CaO2 = 9 ml . dl- 1). Maximum cerebrovascular responses to severe hypoxia
were greater in young than in aged rats and these trends were significant
in both ligated and unligated cortical tissue (p less than 0.05). CMRO2 was
maintained at control levels during moderate hypoxia but decreased
significantly more in aged than in young rats when CaO2 was decreased to 3
ml . dl-1. These results suggest that baseline CBF and the sensitivity of
cerebrovascular receptors to moderate hypoxia are similar in young vs aged
rats but that maximum reactivity severe hypoxia is attenuated in aged
subjects. CBF measured after one minute of hypoxia, before the induction of
brain tissue acidosis, produced no significant change in the CBF response
to hypoxia or in the difference between young and aged rats. Brain tissue
pH changes do not appear to be the major factor for mediating CBF increases
during hypoxia in young or aged rats, although it may interact with other
mediators of the response.
ARTICLES
Cerebrovascular response to hypoxia in young vs aged rats
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