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Krogh's diffusion coefficient for oxygen in isolated Xenopus skeletal muscle fibers and rat myocardial trabeculae at maximum rates of oxygen consumption

Authors :
Marleen B. E. Lee-de Groot
Ariane L. des Tombe
Richard T. Jaspers
Willem J. van der Laarse
Brechje J. van Beek-Harmsen
Kinesiology
Source :
van der Laarse, W J, des Tombe, A L, van Beek-Harmsen, B J, Lee-de Groot, M B E & Jaspers, R T 2005, ' Krogh's diffusion coefficient for oxygen in isolated Xenopus skeletal muscle fibers and rat myocardial trabeculae at maximum rates of oxygen consumption ', Journal of Applied Physiology (1985), vol. 99, pp. 2173-80 . https://doi.org/10.1152/japplphysiol.00470.2005, Journal of Applied Physiology (1985), 99, 2173-80. American Physiological Society
Publication Year :
2005
Publisher :
American Physiological Society, 2005.

Abstract

The value of the diffusion coefficient for oxygen in muscle is uncertain. The diffusion coefficient is important because it is a determinant of the extracellular oxygen tension at which the core of muscle fibers becomes anoxic (Po(2crit)). Anoxic cores in muscle fibers impair muscular function and may limit adaptation of muscle cells to increased load and/or activity. We used Hill's diffusion equations to determine Krogh's diffusion coefficient (Dalpha) for oxygen in single skeletal muscle fibers from Xenopus laevis at 20 degrees C (n = 6) and in myocardial trabeculae from the rat at 37 degrees C (n = 9). The trabeculae were dissected from the right ventricular myocardium of control (n = 4) and monocrotaline-treated, pulmonary hypertensive rats (n = 5). The cross-sectional area of the preparations, the maximum rate of oxygen consumption (Vo(2 max)), and Po(2crit) were determined. Dalpha increased in the following order: Xenopus muscle fibers Dalpha = 1.23 nM.mm(2).mmHg(-1).s(-1) (SD 0.12), control rat trabeculae Dalpha = 2.29 nM.mm(2).mmHg(-1).s(-1) (SD 0.24) (P = 0.0012 vs. Xenopus), and hypertrophied rat trabeculae Dalpha = 6.0 nM.mm(2).mmHg(-1).s(-1) (SD 2.8) (P = 0.039 vs. control rat trabeculae). Dalpha increased with extracellular space in the preparation (Spearman's rank correlation coefficient = 0.92, P0.001). The values for Dalpha indicate that Xenopus muscle fibers cannot reach Vo(2 max) in vivo because Po(2crit) can be higher than arterial Po(2) and that hypertrophied rat cardiomyocytes can become hypoxic at the maximum heart rate.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
15221601 and 87507587
Volume :
99
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of Applied Physiology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....4cca3fdaf147d796eb39b4d543a7788a
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1152/japplphysiol.00470.2005