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  • Article
    Maher JT, Manchanda SC, Cymerman A, Wolfe DL, Hartley LH.
    Am J Physiol. 1975 Feb;228(2):477-81.
    Previous studies have shown that exposure to high altitude results in an initial increase in heart rate, followed by a return to sea-level values within several days; circulating catecholamines rise progressively during this time. Nine conscious dogs were studied in normoxia (N) and after 10 days' exposure to 445 torr (CH). The mean (plus or minus SE) hematocrit was higher in CH (50 plus or minus 2 vs. 42 plus or minus 1%) while Pa-o2 (53 plus or minus 1 vs. 97 plus or minus 2 torr) and PaCO2 (27 plus or minus 1 vs. 35 plus or minus 1 torr) were lower than in N. A 3.5-fold increase in plasma norepinephrine above the N value was found in CH. Arterial pH, heart rate (HR), and mean femoral arterial pressure (MAP) did not differ significantly in N and CH. Isoproterenol (ISO), 0.5 mug/kg iv, produced an average increase in HR of 92 plus or minus 9 beats/min in N, but only 66 plus or minus 8 beats/min in CH (P smaller than .02). Reduction in MAP after ISO were similar. Pretreatment with propranolol, 0.15 mg/kg iv, reduced HR equally in N and CH without affecting MAP, but diminished the HR response to ISO significantly more in CH than in N. The attenuated chronotropic response to beta-adrenoceptor stimulation following chronic hypobaric hypoxia suggests a relative cardiac refractoriness secondary to an increased level of sympathetic activity.
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