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Departments of 1 Thoracic Surgery, 2 Obstetrics, 3 Physiology, and 4 Neonatology, Centre Hospitalier Régional Universitaire de Lille, Lille Cédex 59037, France
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ABSTRACT |
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High levels of circulating catecholamines are
found in the fetus, and fetal stress and birth induce a marked surge in
catecholamine secretion. Little is known about the role of
catecholamines on the fetal pulmonary circulation. To determine the
effects of catecholamines on the pulmonary vascular tone, we tested the
hemodynamic response to norepinephrine and dopamine infusion in
chronically prepared late-gestation fetal lambs. We found that
norepinephrine infusion (0.5 µg · kg
1 · min
1)
increased pulmonary artery pressure (PAP) by 10 ± 1%
(P < 0.01), left pulmonary artery blood flow by
73 ± 14% (P < 0.01), and decreased pulmonary
vascular resistance (PVR) by 33 ± 6% (P < 0.01). The pulmonary vasodilator effect of norepinephrine was abolished
after nitric oxide synthase inhibition. Dopamine infusion at 5 µg · kg
1 · min
1 did not
significantly change PVR. Conversely, dopamine infusion at 10 µg · kg
1 · min
1 increased
PAP (P < 0.01) and progressively increased PVR by
30 ± 14% (P < 0.01). These results indicate
that catecholamines may modulate basal pulmonary vascular tone in the
ovine fetus. We speculate that catecholamines may play a significant
role in the maintenance of the fetal pulmonary circulation and in
mediating changes in the transitional pulmonary circulation.
norepinephrine; dopamine; nitric oxide
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INTRODUCTION |
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THE FETAL PULMONARY CIRCULATION is characterized by high pulmonary vascular resistance (PVR) and low blood flow. Despite high pulmonary artery pressure (PAP), lung is perfused with <10% of combined ventricular output during late gestation. Because of high PVR in the fetus, most of the right ventricular output crosses the ductus arteriosus into the descending aorta, thereby increasing umbilical-placental flow and gas exchange. Mechanisms that maintain high PVR in utero are incompletely understood but may include low fetal PO2, lack of a gas-liquid interface, and production of vasoconstrictor mediators.
Little is known about the role of catecholamines on the fetal pulmonary
vascular tone under basal conditions or at birth. Catecholamine levels
are higher in fetal than in maternal plasma (11, 27) and
increase at the end of gestation (27). These data provide
some indirect evidence that endogenous catecholamines may play a
significant role in the fetus and the newborn. Norepinephrine and
dopamine represent the main catecholamines found in the fetal circulating blood. Fetal stress (hypoxia, invasive procedures) induces
a marked surge in catecholamine secretion (13, 33). An
increase in plasma catecholamine concentration during fetal hypoxic
stress is considered as one of the mechanisms of circulation redistribution toward the brain, heart, and adrenal glands
(14). Abman and co-workers (3) have proposed
that prolonged but not brief intrauterine hypoxia stimulates
catecholamine release, which may contribute to persistent pulmonary
vasoconstriction through activation of
-adrenergic receptors and
altered vasoreactivity. High levels of circulating catecholamines have
also been measured at birth (4). Increased catecholamines
at delivery contribute clearly to lung fluid reabsorption, surfactant
release, and systemic hemodynamic adaptations (25, 34).
However, the effects of such a catecholamine release surge at birth on
the pulmonary circulation are not known.
Conflicting results exist on the vascular effects of catecholamines.
Although catecholamines are known as vasopressor agents, reports
suggest that catecholamines may have some pulmonary vasodilator effects
during the fetal life. Elevation of intracranial pressure in fetal
goats results in a fall of PVR through activation of
-adrenergic
receptors (16). In vitro studies have reported that
norepinephrine dilates some systemic (24) and pulmonary (39) vessels in newborn animals. Activation of specific
dopaminergic receptors mediates relaxation of pulmonary vessels
(29, 30). Thus circulating catecholamines may play a
significant role in the maintenance of the fetal pulmonary circulation
and during transitional circulation at birth.
We therefore hypothesized that catecholamines modulate pulmonary vascular tone during fetal life. To test this hypothesis, we studied the pulmonary vascular response to norepinephrine and dopamine infusion in chronically prepared late-gestation fetal lambs.
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MODEL AND METHODS |
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Animal Preparation
All animal procedures and protocols used in this study were reviewed and approved by the French "Ministère de l'Agriculture, de la Pêche et de l'Alimentation" before the studies were conducted. Nine mixed-breed (Columbia-Rambouillet) pregnant ewes between 126 and 128 days gestation (term = 145 days) were fasted for 48 h before surgery. Ewes were sedated with intravenous pentobarbital sodium (total dose 2-4 g) and anesthetized with 1% buvicaine hydrochloride (4 mg) by lumbar puncture. Ewes were kept sedated but breathed spontaneously throughout the surgery. Under sterile conditions, the fetal lamb's left forelimb was delivered through a uterine incision. A skin incision was made under the left forelimb after local infiltration with lidocaine (2 ml, 1% solution). Polyvinyl catheters (20 gauge) were advanced into the ascending aorta and the superior vena cava after insertion in the axillary artery and vein. A left thoracotomy exposed the heart and great vessels. Catheters were inserted into the left pulmonary artery (LPA; 22 gauge), main pulmonary artery (20 gauge), and left atrium (20 gauge) by direct puncture through purse-string sutures and secured as described (2). An ultrasonic flow transducer (size 6; Transonic Systems, Ithaca, NY) was placed around the LPA to measure blood flow. The uteroplacental circulation was kept intact, and the fetus was gently replaced in the uterus. An additional catheter was placed in the amniotic cavity to measure pressure. Ampicillin (500 mg) was added to the amniotic cavity before closure of the hysterotomy. The flow transducer and catheters were exteriorized through a subcutaneous tunnel to an external flank pouch. The ewes recovered rapidly from surgery, generally standing in their pens within 6 h. Food and water were provided ad libitum. Catheters were maintained by daily infusions of 2 ml of heparinized saline (10 U/ml). Catheter positions were verified at autopsy. Studies were performed after a minimum recovery time of 48 h. Estimated weight of the fetal lambs was 3,000 g.Physiological Measurements
The flow transducer cable was connected to an internally calibrated flowmeter (T201; Transonic Systems) for continuous measurements of LPA blood flow. The output filter of the flowmeter was set at 30 Hz. The absolute value of flow was determined from the mean of phasic blood flow signals (at least 30 cardiac cycles), with zero blood flow defined as the measured flow value immediately before the beginning of systole (5). Main pulmonary artery, aortic, left atrial, and amniotic catheters were connected to a blood pressure transducer (Merlin monitor, Hewlett-Packard). The pressure and flow signals were continuously recorded and processed on a computer (Pentium III, 450 Mz) using an analog-to-digital converter system (Lab-View, National Instrument, Woerden, The Netherlands). Data were sampled at a rate of 50 samples/s. Pressures were referenced to the amniotic cavity pressure. Calibration of the pressure transducers was performed with a mercury column manometer. Heart rate was determined from the phasic pulmonary blood flow signal. PVR in the left lung was calculated as the difference between mean PAP and left atrial pressure (LAP) divided by mean left pulmonary blood flow. Blood samples from the main pulmonary artery catheter were used for blood-gas analysis and oxygen saturation measurements (OSM 3 hemoximeter and ABL 520; Radiometer, Copenhagen, Denmark).Drug Preparation
Norepinephrine (Aguettant, Lyon, France) was dissolved in normal saline to a concentration of 15 µg/ml. Dopamine (Pierre Favre, Boulogne, France) was dissolved in normal saline to two different concentrations: 150 and 300 µg/ml. The drugs were infused in the superior vena cava at a rate of 6 ml/h. L-Nitro-arginine (L-NA; Sigma Chemical, St. Louis, MO) solution was freshly prepared just before infusion. L-NA (30 mg) was dissolved in a few drops of 1 M HCl. Then, 1 ml of normal saline was added. One molar NaOH was added to titrate the pH to 7.40.Experimental Design
Two different experimental protocols were included in this study: 1) pulmonary hemodynamic response to norepinephrine and dopamine infusion and 2) pulmonary hemodynamic response to norepinephrine after nitric oxide (NO) synthase (NOS) inhibition. The infusion protocols were randomized. A minimum recovery period of 24 h was required between each protocol. To ensure that complete recovery was achieved before starting a protocol, we checked that the measured parameters and arterial blood gases returned to the baseline values.Protocol 1: hemodynamic response to catecholamines infusion.
To investigate the effects of catecholamines on fetal pulmonary
circulation, we studied the hemodynamic response to infusion of
norepinephrine at 1.5 µg/min (
0.5
µg · kg
1 · min
1),
dopamine at 15 µg/min (
5
µg · kg
1 · min
1), and
dopamine at 30 µg/min (
10
µg · kg
1 · min
1). All
study drugs, including saline, were infused into the venous catheter
(superior vena cava). Duration of each experiment was at least 240 min.
Saline (6 ml/h) was first infused for at least 30 min. After 30 min of
stable baseline measurements, the drugs were infused for 120 min (from
30 to 150 min). Then, the catheter was flushed with saline (6 ml/h) for
30 min (from 150 to 180 min). Mean PAP, LAP, mean aortic pressure
(AoP), amniotic pressure, left pulmonary blood flow, and heart rate
were recorded at 10-min intervals, starting at the beginning of the
infusion. PVR in the left lung was calculated.
Protocol 2: hemodynamic response to norepinephrine after NOS inhibition. To investigate the effects of NOS inhibition on the hemodynamic response to norepinephrine, protocol 1 was repeated after L-NA infusion. L-NA (30 mg over 10 min) was infused into the LPA (from 30 to 40 min). This dose was selected from past studies that have demonstrated effective blockade of NOS activity during acetylcholine and flow-induced vasodilation for at least 4 h (9). Then the pulmonary artery catheter was flushed with normal saline at a constant rate of 6 ml/h during the 20 min before starting the norepinephrine infusion (from 60 to 180 min).
Data Analysis
The results are presented as means ± SE. The data were analyzed using repeated-measures and factorial ANOVA. Intergroup differences were analyzed with the Fisher's, Scheffé's, and Bonferroni/Dunn's least-significant test because of multiple comparison (Stat View for PC; Abacus Concepts, Berkeley, CA). A P < 0.05 was considered statistically significant.| |
RESULTS |
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Protocol 1: Pulmonary Hemodynamic Response to Catecholamines Infusion
Norepinephrine infusion at 1.5 µg/min (
0.5
µg · kg
1 · min
1;
n = 9).
Norepinephrine infusion increased mean PAP by 10 ± 1% (from
57 ± 1 to 63 ± 1 mmHg) after 20 min of drug infusion
(P < 0.01) and progressively increased LPA blood flow
by 73 ± 14% (from 95 ± 4 to 164 ± 14 ml/min) after
40 min of drug infusion (P < 0.01). Mean PVR
progressively decreased by 33 ± 6% (from 0.61 ± 0.03 to
0.41 ± 0.04 mmHg · ml
1 · min
1) after 40 min of drug infusion (P < 0.01; Fig.
1). Mean AoP increased by 10 ± 1%
(from 52 ± 1 to 57 ± 2 mmHg; P < 0.001).
Mean LAP before infusion was 2 ± 1 mmHg and did not change during
the study period. Heart rate did not change during the infusion. Mean
PAP, LPA blood flow, and mean AoP progressively returned to baseline
values after the end of drug infusion. Mean PVR returned to baseline 30 min after the end of drug infusion. Pulmonary arterial
PO2 did not change significantly during the
study period (Table 1).
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Dopamine infusion at 15 µg/min (
5
µg · kg
1 · min
1; n = 7).
Dopamine infusion increased mean PAP by 7 ± 1% (from 54 to
58 ± 1 mmHg) after 30 min of drug infusion (P < 0.001), and LPA blood flow progressively increased by 23 ± 8%
(from 112 ± 4 to 138 ± 9 ml/min) after 50 min of drug
infusion (P < 0.05). Mean PVR did not change
significantly during drug infusion (Fig.
2). Mean AoP increased by 8 ± 2%
(from 50 ± 2 to 54 ± 1 mmHg) after 30 min of drug infusion
(P < 0.05). Mean LAP before infusion was 2 ± 1 mmHg and did not change during the study period. Heart rate did not
change during the infusion. Mean PAP, LPA blood flow, mean PVR, and
mean AoP progressively returned to baseline values after the end of
drug infusion. Pulmonary arterial PO2 did not change significantly during the study period (Table 1).
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Dopamine infusion at 30 µg/min (
10
µg · kg
1 · min
1;
n = 7).
Dopamine infusion rapidly increased mean PAP by 20 ± 5%
(from 55 ± 2 to 66 ± 3 mmHg; P < 0.0001).
After an initial increase by 19 ± 8% (from 113 ± 6 to
134 ± 10 ml/min), left artery pulmonary blood flow returned to
baseline after 30 min of dopamine infusion. Mean PVR progressively
increased by 30 ± 14% (from 0.54 ± 0.03 to 0.70 ± 0.08 mmHg · ml
1 · min
1)
after 50 min of drug infusion (P < 0.01; Fig.
3). Mean AoP increased by 20 ± 7% (from 51 ± 2 to 61 ± 4 mmHg) after 20 min of drug
infusion (P < 0.0001). Mean LAP before infusion was
2 ± 1 mmHg and did not change during the study period. Heart rate
progressively increased during drug infusion by 40 ± 2% (from
162 ± 8 to 226 ± 5 beats/min; P < 0.01).
Mean PAP, left mean PVR, and mean AoP remained elevated 30 min after
the end of drug infusion (initial saline infusion/after drug infusion:
P < 0.01). Arterial blood PO2
did not change significantly during the study period (Table 1).
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Protocol: Pulmonary Hemodynamic Response to Norepinephrine Infusion After NOS Inhibition (n = 6)
L-NA infusion did not increase significantly mean PAP or mean AoP and did not decrease significantly pulmonary artery blood flow. However, mean PVR increased significantly by 20% (from 0.49 ± 2 to 0.59 ± 0.01 mmHg · ml
1 · min
1;
P < 0.01) after L-NA infusion. Then, mean
PVR did not change with norepinephrine infusion (Fig.
4).
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DISCUSSION |
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In this in vivo study, we tested the hypothesis that
catecholamines modulate pulmonary vascular tone and reactivity during perinatal life. We studied the pulmonary vascular response to norepinephrine and dopamine infusion in near-term fetal lambs. We
demonstrated that norepinephrine (0.5 µg · kg
1 · min
1)
decreased and dopamine (10 µg · kg
1 · min
1)
increased PVR. The pulmonary vasodilator effect of norepinephrine was
abolished by NOS blockade. Conversely, no significant pulmonary vascular response was found with a lower dose (5 µg · kg
1 · min
1) of
dopamine infusion. These results support the hypothesis that catecholamines may alter pulmonary basal tone during the perinatal period. Moreover, the data suggest that norepinephrine-induced pulmonary vasodilation is related to NO release.
This study provides information regarding the pulmonary hemodynamic
effects of circulating catecholamines during fetal life. High levels of
circulating catecholamines are found in the fetus (27).
Concentrations of catecholamines increase with the gestational age and
peak at delivery (11, 27). Moreover, the lungs contribute largely to postnatal catecholamine kinetics (34). Indeed,
the lungs are a major site of norepinephrine release into the
circulation just after birth, contributing about one-third of
norepinephrine total body spillover (35). The lungs are
also directly involved in catecholamine clearance, especially at
high pulmonary blood flow (35). However, although the
local pulmonary synthesis of catecholamines suggests that
catecholamines may mediate, at least in part, pulmonary adjustments at
birth, the effects of catecholamines on the fetal pulmonary vascular
tone under basal conditions and at birth are not clear. It is likely
that fetal basal production of catecholamines has little influence on
the basal pulmonary vascular tone. Bilateral thoracic sympathectomy
causes only subtle falls in resistance (8). Phentolamine,
an
-adrenergic blocker, has little effect on fetal pulmonary blood
flow (2). However, although catecholamines may not
contribute to basal PVR in the fetus, the ability to respond to
adrenergic stimuli exists early in maturation and may modulate
pulmonary vascular tone during stress. Indeed, findings suggest that
hypoxia may augment PVR through activation of
-adrenergic receptors.
Prolonged (but not brief) intrauterine hypoxia results in sustained
pulmonary vasoconstriction despite the return of fetal
PO2 to normal values (3).
Intrapulmonary infusion of phentolamine rapidly lowers PVR to baseline
values during recovery after prolonged hypoxia. Furthermore, pulmonary vasoreactivity remains impaired during recovery after prolonged hypoxia, as reflected by decreased vasodilation to increases in PO2 (3). Thus prolonged hypoxia
stimulates catecholamine release, which may contribute to persistent
pulmonary vasoconstriction and altered vasoreactivity to oxygen.
Furthermore, activation of
-adrenergic receptors in fetal goats,
induced by increased intracranial pressure, results in a drop in PVR
(14). Our study supports the hypothesis that
catecholamines may modulate fetal pulmonary vascular tone.
Norepinephrine is a vasopressor agent that activates both
(
1 and
2)- and
1-adrenoceptors.
-Adrenoceptors participate in the
sympathetically mediated vasoconstriction of human vessels (26). Previous in vitro and in vivo studies showed
pulmonary vasoconstrictor effects of norepinephrine (19,
20). However, conflicting results were reported. Norepinephrine
infusion decreased PVR in a canine model of pulmonary embolism with
pulmonary hypertension (17). A pulmonary vasodilator
response to norepinephrine was observed after acute hypoxia in isolated
perfused cat lung (10). Norepinephrine induces
vasorelaxation in isolated intrapulmonary arteries of neonatal and
adult pigs (37, 39). Similar relaxant effects of
norepinephrine have also been found in rat isolated cerebral arteries
(15) and in neonatal rat femoral arteries (24). Two conditions were required to obtain
norepinephrine-induced pulmonary and systemic vasodilation in these
studies: 1) preconstriction of the pulmonary vessels and
2) intact endothelium (15, 24, 37, 39). Thus
norepinephrine could exhibit a pulmonary vasodilator effect in vivo at
elevated pulmonary vascular tone. Our results support the hypothesis
that norepinephrine may have pulmonary vasodilator properties.
Mechanisms of norepinephrine-induced fetal pulmonary vasodilation
remain speculative. In our study, the pulmonary dilator response to
norepinephrine was abolished by NOS inhibition, suggesting that the
pulmonary vasorelaxation is NO mediated. Further evidence demonstrates
that norepinephrine induces endothelial NO release in systemic and
pulmonary arteries from fetal to adult experimental models (15,
24, 28, 37, 39) and that NOS inhibition modulates the
norepinephrine vascular response. Norepinephrine-induced NO-release
mechanisms are uncertain but may include activation of
2- and/or
-adrenoceptors.
2-Adrenoceptor antagonists inhibit norepinephrine-mediated relaxation of pulmonary (37, 39)
or systemic arteries (24) or enhance
norepinephrine-mediated pulmonary vasoconstrictive response (20,
22).
-Adrenoceptor may also be involved in
norepinephrine-induced, NO-dependent vasorelaxation as suggested in the
pulmonary vessels of rats (31). Because
1-adrenoceptor agonists raise pulmonary vascular tone
(20), pulmonary vascular response to norepinephrine may
result from the balance between activation of
1-adrenoceptor-induced vasoconstriction and endothelial
2- and
-adrenoceptor-mediated NO release and vasodilation (20, 22, 28). Thus the vascular response to norepinephrine may depend on the ratio of
1- to
2- and
-adrenoceptors at the surface of the
endothelium or of the smooth muscle cells (40).
Maturational change in pulmonary arterial adrenoceptors previously
described may explain conflicting results regarding the vascular
response to norepinephrine (3, 23, 30).
It has been widely established that dopamine plays an important role in
cardiovascular, renal, hormonal, and central nervous system regulation
through activation of
- and
-adrenergic and dopaminergic
receptors (38). Dopamine stimulates specific dopamine receptors at low concentration causing vasodilation,
1-adrenoceptors at medium concentration, and
1-adrenoceptors at high concentration (12).
Evidence demonstrates that dopamine receptor activation may induce
pulmonary vascular relaxation in various experimental models (23,
29, 30). However, our study fails to demonstrate any
vasorelaxant effect at low-dose dopamine infusion in fetal pulmonary
circulation. Although a lack of dopamine-mediated pulmonary vasodilation has also been observed even at low dose by other investigators (6, 7), age-related changes in the pulmonary vascular response to dopamine may explain this result. Indeed, lower
responsiveness of pulmonary vascular dopamine receptors has been
demonstrated in newborn compared with older animals (23, 30). However, we cannot rule out the hypothesis that, at the dose of 15 µg/min (
5
µg · kg
1 · min
1),
dopamine may have also started to stimulate
1- and
1-adrenoceptors. A high dose of dopamine-mediated
increase in pulmonary vascular tone was found in isolated canine lungs
(21). Our results support the hypothesis that high doses
of dopamine may induce a pulmonary vasoconstriction. A striking
difference can be observed between the pulmonary vascular response to
low vs. high dose of dopamine (trend to a decrease in PVR at low dose,
potent increase in PVR at high dose). This observation provides more
evidence that dopamine may mediate two opposite responses depending on
its concentration.
There are three potential limitations in our study. First,
norepinephrine infusion may have caused changes in ductus arteriosus tone. As ductus arteriosus compression may induce pulmonary
vasodilation (1), norepinephrine-mediated pulmonary
vasodilation may result from ductus arteriosus constriction. However,
this hypothesis is unlikely, because gradient pressure between the
pulmonary artery and aorta did not change during norepinephrine
infusion and after L-NA infusion, suggesting a lack of
significant effect on basal tone of the ductus arteriosus. Second, we
cannot rule out that the pulmonary vasodilation observed during
norepinephrine infusion may result from systemic or centrally mediated
reflex events. Indeed, norepinephrine infusion increases both pulmonary
and systemic artery pressure. Because an increase in PAP elevates
pulmonary artery blood flow (1), norepinephrine-induced
vasodilation may be caused by the mechanical increase in shear stress.
Furthermore, shear stress-mediated pulmonary vasodilation is also NO
dependent. However, norepinephrine-mediated increase in PAP was lower
(mean PAP increase = 6 mmHg) than the increase in PAP required to
induce pulmonary vasodilation (usually 15 mmHg) (1).
Furthermore, an increase in PAP results in a brief decrease in PVR,
whereas norepinephrine infusion induces a sustained pulmonary
vasodilation (1). Thus it is unlikely that the pulmonary
vasodilation found during norepinephrine infusion may be exclusively
related to increases in PAP. Third, plasma catecholamine concentrations
were not measured in our study. The norepinephrine infusion rate was
chosen for consistency with earlier studies on norepinephrine effects
or concentrations in the late-gestation fetal lamb. Especially, Hooper et al. (18) found that plasma norepinephrine
concentrations increase to 6,800 ± 1,000 pg/ml after 2 h of
a 1 µg · kg
1 · min
1
norepinephrine infusion in fetal lamb. These data suggest that plasma
norepinephrine concentrations obtained in our study at a rate of 0.5 µg · kg
1 · min
1 might be
in the same range as those observed at birth (2,200 ± 400 pg/ml)
(11) or during fetal hypoxemia (4,100 ± 500 pg/ml) (36) and, therefore, might be of physiological relevance.
To our knowledge, plasma catecholamine concentrations were not
evaluated during dopamine infusion in fetal lambs. However, effects of
low-dose dopamine infusion on plasma catecholamine levels were studied in preterm newborn infants (32). Plasma dopamine
concentrations measured during 4 µg · kg
1 · min
1 dopamine
infusions in preterm neonates are clearly higher than those measured at
birth in lambs (90,000 ± 25,000 pg/ml vs. 140 ± 20 pg/ml),
suggesting that the pulmonary hemodynamic responses observed during
dopamine infusion (5 and 10 µg · kg
1 · min
1) in our
study are pharmacological responses and are not of physiological significance.
Perspectives
We found that catecholamines may modulate pulmonary basal tone in the ovine fetus. Especially, norepinephrine induces a potent pulmonary vasorelaxant response related to NO release. As a surge of norepinephrine exists at birth with plasma norepinephrine concentrations in the same range as those obtained in our study, we speculate that norepinephrine may play a significant role in pulmonary vasodilation at birth. The birth-related surge in norepinephrine is explained, at least in part, by an increase in sympathoadrenal activity. Interestingly, Smolich et al. (35) reported that the lungs contribute about two-fifths of the total body norepinephrine spillover into the circulation. The contribution of norepinephrine release from the lungs in the pulmonary vascular adjustments that occur during the transitional circulation is yet to be fully elucidated.Persistent pulmonary hypertension of the newborn (PPHN) is a clinical
syndrome characterized by sustained elevation of PVR, structural
changes in the pulmonary vascular bed, and abnormal pulmonary
vasoreactivity. High PVR can cause right-to-left shunting of blood flow
across the ductus arteriosus or foramen ovale, leading to severe
hypoxemia. Dopamine infusion has been proposed in newborn infants with
myocardial dysfunction or systemic hypotension. Because high-dose
dopamine infusion (10 µg · kg
1 · min
1) may
increase PVR, special care should be taken when using dopamine in PPHN.
Whether or not the pulmonary vasodilator effects of norepinephrine infusion exist in PPHN is presently unknown and remains to be studied
in an experimental model.
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ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS |
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The authors gratefully acknowledge Prof. S. H. Abman for the help to develop the experimental ovine model.
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FOOTNOTES |
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Address for reprint requests and other correspondence: L. Storme, Service de Médecine Néonatale, Hôpital Jeanne de Flandre, CHRU de Lille, Lille Cédex 59037, France (E-mail: lstorme{at}chru-lille.fr).
The costs of publication of this article were defrayed in part by the payment of page charges. The article must therefore be hereby marked "advertisement" in accordance with 18 U.S.C. Section 1734 solely to indicate this fact.
Received 11 August 2000; accepted in final form 6 April 2001.
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