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J Appl Physiol 49: 424-430, 1980;
8750-7587/80 $5.00
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Journal of Applied Physiology, Vol 49, Issue 3 424-430, Copyright © 1980 by American Physiological Society


ARTICLES

Fetal cardiovascular and metabolic responses to simulated diving in the Weddell seal

G. C. Liggins, J. Qvist, P. W. Hochachka, B. J. Murphy, R. K. Creasy, R. C. Schneider, M. T. Snider and W. M. Zapol

Fetal responses to normobaric diving simulated by submersion of the maternal head for 20 min were studied in four conscious Weddell seals near term. Microspheres injected into the maternal aorta were distributed to the placenta and kidneys in the ratio of 0.4 in the control period and 19.3 during diving, suggesting minimal placental vasoconstriction. Fetal heart rate fell during diving from a mean control value of 90 to 34 beats/min after 4 min. The onset of fetal bradycardia was not consistently associated with changes in blood gas tensions. Diving was associated with a fall in fetal arterial O2 tension from 24 to 9 Torr, arterial CO2 tension rose from 47 to 85 Torr, and arterial pH fell from 7.35 to 7.24. Fetal-maternal gradients for CO2 and H+ transport remained constant, whereas the gradient for O2 transport fell from 47 Torr before diving to 14 Torr at the end of diving. Blood lactate concentrations increased three- to fourfold during diving and reached peak values 10-15 min after diving ended. The similarity of the fetal and maternal heart rate responses to diving is consistent with the presence of physiological oxygen-conserving reflexes akin to the adult's.


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