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      Postprandial gastrointestinal blood flow and oxygen consumption: effects of hypoxemia in neonatal piglets.

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          Abstract

          The effects of feeding on gastrointestinal (GI) perfusion and oxygen transport in hypoxemic neonates is unknown. We evaluated these effects in unanesthetized, spontaneously breathing newborn piglets by comparing three experimental groups: nine hypoxemic piglets (mean PaO2 26 torr) which were fed with formula, six hypoxemic piglets (mean PaO2 27 torr) which were not fed, and four normoxemic piglets (mean PaO2 79 torr) which were fed and served as controls. The control-fed group exhibited an increase in stomach and small intestinal mucosal-submucosal blood flow within 30 min following feeding which was significantly greater than that observed in the hypoxemic fed piglets. GI O2 delivery and O2 uptake rose significantly (p less than 0.05) following a meal secondary to increases in total GI blood flow. Oxygen extraction was unchanged postprandially in the control group. In the hypoxemic nonfed piglets, total and regional GI blood flow was unaltered during hypoxemia. Reductions in arterial O2 content led to significant decreases in GI O2 delivery. Gastrointestinal oxygen uptake remained stable with a compensatory increase in GI O2 extraction. In the hypoxemic-fed piglets, hypoxia significantly decreased stomach blood flow and led to unchanged blood flow in the remainder of the GI tract. Significant reductions in arterial O2 content and GI O2 delivery were observed, accompanied by significant increases in O2 extraction. Hypoxemic fed animals did not exhibit the expected increase in O2 uptake to meet postprandial metabolic demands. When the hypoxemic insult was terminated, fed piglets demonstrated significant total and regional GI hyperemia leading to increased GI O2 uptake when compared with hypoxemic nonfed piglets.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          Pediatr Res
          Pediatric research
          Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)
          0031-3998
          0031-3998
          Jan 1987
          : 21
          : 1
          Article
          10.1203/00006450-198701000-00020
          3797137
          0f5d7e1c-6ed4-4aec-b6f1-57896e8fb216
          History

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