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Clinical and Experimental Pharmacology and Physiology | 1988

SIMULATION OF ACUTE HAEMORRHAGE IN UNANAESTHETIZED RABBITS

John Ludbrook; Simon J. Potocnik; Robyn L. Woods

1. We have shown that it is feasible to match the linear rate of fall of cardiac output that occurs during haemorrhage at 2.7 ml/kg per min in unanaesthetized rabbits by constricting the thoracic inferior vena cava so as to decrease venous return.


Acta Neuropathologica | 1996

Experimental hydranencephaly in the ovine fetus

E. M. Wintour; M. Lewitt; A. McFarlane; Karen M. Moritz; Simon J. Potocnik; Sandra Rees; K. Tangalakis

Abstract Hydranencephaly is defined as the replacement of a previously normal brain, in whole or in part, by membranous fluid-filled sacs. The etiology is not well understood, and the time course of development is unknown. Fifteen ovine fetuses were chronically cannulated and had both carotid arteries ligated at 100 days of gestation (term is 145–150 days). They were killed at 1 (n = 4), 2 (n = 6) and 4 (n = 5) weeks post-surgery, and the findings compared with those of 25 age-matched controls. By 2 weeks post-surgery the entire cerebral hemispheres and diencephalon had been replaced by fluid closely resembling cerebrospinal fluid. The choroid plexus, pituitary and brain stem remained outwardly normal, but the cerebellum showed signs of damage. Fetuses maintained normal values for blood gases and hematocrit up to 4 weeks post-surgery, and grew normally. Light microscopy of the brain stem showed significant losses of cell populations in the medulla by 4 weeks. Vascular casting and acute blood flow studies in an additional group of fetuses showed that the entire brain was perfused via the vertebral-occipital anastomosis immediately after acute bilateral carotid clamping, but that the blood flow rate was insufficient to maintain adequate oxygen delivery.


Clinical and Experimental Pharmacology and Physiology | 1986

Factors influencing the effects of intravenous naloxone on arterial pressure and heart rate after haemorrhage in conscious rabbits

Peter C. Rutter; Simon J. Potocnik; John Ludbrook

1. The circulatory responses to different intravenous doses of naloxone were studied in conscious rabbits before and after haemorrhage, under different conditions including prior ganglion blockade.


Clinical and Experimental Pharmacology and Physiology | 1994

BLOOD VOLUME MEASUREMENTS IN THE NEONATAL LAMB: VALIDATION OF A METHOD USING [51Cr]-LABELLED RED CELLS

Karen M. Moritz; Simon J. Potocnik; K. Tangalakis; E. M. Wintour

1. The reproducibility of blood volume measurements, using [51Cr]‐labelled red blood cells (RBC) was tested in three lambs, 79–89 days of age, and the accuracy was tested in eight lambs, 83± 0.4 days of age, in which blood volume was measured simultaneously by [51Cr]‐RBC and [125I]‐gamma globulin plus haematocrit (hct).


Biochemical Pharmacology | 1994

Hepatic uptake and excretion of [14C]sodium taurocholate by the isolated perfused fetal sheep liver.

John A. Ring; Hany Ghabrial; Michael S. Ching; Simon J. Potocnik; Arthur Shulkes; Richard A. Smallwood; Denis J. Morgan

We have developed an in situ isolated perfused fetal sheep liver preparation to study fetal hepatic function free from the confounding influences of the mother and other fetal organs, and we have used the preparation to study the fetal hepatic clearance and biliary excretion of sodium taurocholate (TC). The viability and stability of this model were established by monitoring perfusion pressure, oxygen consumption, perfusate enzymes and electrolytes, the perfusate concentration ratio of lactate to pyruvate, bile flow, and liver histology. Perfusate delivery was 300 mL/min with a mean value of 3.94 mL/min/g liver (range: 2.46-6.72 mL/min/g liver). Gadolinium radiolabeled 15 microns microspheres were used to quantify the ductus venosus shunt through the liver and to determine relative flow rates between right and left hepatic lobes. TC was added to the reservoir either as a [14C]TC tracer bolus dose (2 microCi, N = 5) followed by a constant infusion of unlabeled TC, or as an initial bolus of [14]TC (54 mumol) followed by a [14C]TC constant infusion (30 mumol/hr, specific activity 30 microCi/mmol; N = 3). Perfusate samples were taken from the reservoir every 15 min and bile was collected in 30 min aliquots. Perfusion pressure (7.9 +/ 0.30 mmHg), perfusate potassium and oxygen consumption (0.9 +/- 0.07 mumol/min/g liver) were constant throughout, and the perfusate lactate/pyruvate concentration ratio was low (< 20). Liver histology showed no hypoxic changes. Bile flow fell slightly over the 150 min experiment time from 0.6 to 0.5 muL/min/g liver. These data indicate preparation viability and stability. The extent of the ductus venosus shunt was 16-66% (mean 35 +/- 6%) of umbilical vein flow, which correlated inversely with fetal gestational age (r = 0.94, P < 0.001). Relative flow to right and left lobes of liver was 1:1.4. In bolus dose experiments, TC t1/2 was 81.6 +/- 26 min, clearance (Cl) was 35.0 +/- 22.6 mL/min, shunt corrected extraction (E*) was 0.29 +/- 0.17 and biliary clearance (ClB) was 35.5 +/- 19.5 mL/min. In constant infusion experiments the corresponding results were Cl: 34.7 +/- 18.2, E*: 0.23 +/- 0.16, and ClB 32.7 +/- 17.7. The cumulative biliary excretion of [14C]TC in bolus dose experiments was 86.5 +/- 8.7% of the dose, and in constant infusion experiments, concentration of TC in bile was on average over 800 times that in plasma.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)


Clinical and Experimental Pharmacology and Physiology | 1986

EFFECTS OF ACUTE VERSUS CHRONIC DELETION OF ARTERIAL BARORECEPTOR INPUT ON THE CARDIOVASCULAR RESPONSES TO EXERCISE IN THE RABBIT

John Ludbrook; William F. Graham; Simon J. Potocnik

1. These experiments were designed to confirm that at the onset of treadmill exercise in rabbits the tonic reflex depressor effects of input to the central nervous system from arterial baroreceptors is abolished, thus contributing to the rise of systemic arterial pressure (SAP) and heart rate (HR).


Life Sciences | 1983

Renal handling and acute urinary electrolyte effects of aminoglycoside antibiotics: Use of a solitary renal autotransplant in the conscious sheep

William M. Bennett; John G. McDougall; Simon J. Potocnik; R.D. Wright; Judith A. Whitworth

Renal handling of the aminoglycoside antibiotics gentamicin and tobramycin were studied before and after one hour of constant intravenous infusions adjusted to maintain a concentration of 15 micrograms/mL. A solitary renal autotransplant model in four conscious volume replete 40 Kg sheep was used. This unique surgical preparation allows sampling of renal arterial and renal venous blood as well as urine drained through an exteriorized parotid-ureteral fistula. This surgical preparation has considerable potential in renal pharmacology since it uses a conscious, large animal. Baseline studies in this preparation demonstrated normal, 51CrEDTA and 125 I PAH, clearances which were unaffected by the drugs. Aminoglycoside binding to pooled sheep sera was 11% at physiologic PH, calcium and magnesium concentrations. A-V difference was 1.3 +/- .3 micrograms/mL and extraction by the kidney was 9 +/- 3.2% with no differences between gentamicin and tobramycin. Clearance of gentamicin was 84% and tobramycin 86% of GFR. There was no evidence of tubular injury as evidenced by unchanged urinary beta-2 microglobulin excretion. Serum Na, K, Ca and Mg did not change over the course of the study. Both drugs caused a prompt decrease in absolute and fractional sodium excretion while only gentamicin produced a kaliuresis. Early aminoglycoside effects on electrolyte balance may be an eventual determinant of nephrotoxic potential rather than differences in renal drug handling.


Clinical and Experimental Pharmacology and Physiology | 1981

Renal autotransplants in sheep: investigation of renal function and renovascular hypertension.

John G. McDougall; John P. Coghlan; D. A. Denton; David T. W. Fei; Timothy G. Hammond; Kenneth J. Hardy; Simon J. Potocnik; Bruce A. Scoggins; R. Douglas Wright

1. A novel surgical preparation of sheep with a cervical renal autotransplant has been developed.


Kidney International | 1996

Ontogeny of hormonal and excretory function of the meso- and metanephros in the ovine fetus.

E. Marelyn Wintour; Daine Alcorn; Aldona Butkus; Mario Congiu; Linda Earnest; S. Pompolo; Simon J. Potocnik


American Journal of Physiology-regulatory Integrative and Comparative Physiology | 1994

Effect of maternal glucocorticoid treatment on fetal fluids in sheep at 0.4 gestation.

E. M. Wintour; Daine Alcorn; A. McFarlane; Karen M. Moritz; Simon J. Potocnik; K. Tangalakis

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A. McFarlane

University of Melbourne

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D. A. Denton

University of Melbourne

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Daine Alcorn

University of Melbourne

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