Carbonic anhydrase in the red blood cell and in the pulmonary endothelium facilitates the elimination of CO2 in the lungs. Although a carbonic anhydrase inhibitor, such as acetazolamide which is frequently used in patients with glaucoma or with metabolic alkalosis, is known to impair the CO2 elimination in the lungs, the dose-response curve of CO2 elimination with acetazolamide has not been well documented in CO2 homeostasis. In the present study, the effects of inhibited carbonic anhydrase were tested in 8 anesthetized dogs; various dosages of acetazolamide were used. When the administered clinical dosage of acetazolamide increased from 5 to 20mg/kg, PaCO2, PvCO2, arterial-alveolar difference (a-ADC02), and physiological Vd/Vt ratio increased progressively to 52.0±2.1 Torr, 58.0±3.0 Torr, 23.4±1.2 Torr, and by 19.2+1.8% (S.E.) respectively, whereas inhibition rate of red blood cell carbonic anhydrase (RCA) activity increased progressively to 73.1± 2.1% (S.E.). on the other hand, PaCO2 decreased to 27.1±1.8 Torr (S.E.) upon the first injection of 5 mg/kg of acetazolamide, but PaCO2 did not change further upon 3 additional 5 mg/kg injections. Mixed venous-arterial PCOl difference ((v-a)PC02), and anatomical Vd/Vt ratio were unchanged by the administration of any doses of acetazolamide. © 1986, PHYSIOLOGICAL SOCIETY OF JAPAN. All rights reserved.
CITATION STYLE
Taki, K., Mizuno, K., Takahashi, N., & Wakusawa, R. (1986). Disturbance of CO2 Elimination in the Lungs by Carbonic Anhydrase Inhibition. The Japanese Journal of Physiology, 36(3), 523–532. https://doi.org/10.2170/jjphysiol.36.523
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