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Cardiac oxygen limitation during an acute thermal challenge in the European perch: Effects of chronic environmental warming and experimental hyperoxia

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journal contribution
posted on 2016-08-01, 00:00 authored by A Ekström, Jeroen Brijs, Timothy ClarkTimothy Clark, A Gräns, F Jutfelt, E Sandblom
Oxygen supply to the heart has been hypothesized to limit cardiac performance and whole animal acute thermal tolerance (CTmax) in fish. We tested these hypotheses by continuously measuring venous oxygen tension (Pvo2) and cardiovascular variables in vivo during acute warming in European perch ( Perca fluviatilis) from a reference area during summer (18°C) and a chronically heated area (Biotest enclosure) that receives warm effluent water from a nuclear power plant and is normally 5–10°C above ambient (24°C at the time of experiments). While CTmaxwas 2.2°C higher in Biotest compared with reference perch, the peaks in cardiac output and heart rate prior to CTmaxoccurred at statistically similar Pvo2values (2.3–4.0 kPa), suggesting that cardiac failure occurred at a common critical Pvo2threshold. Environmental hyperoxia (200% air saturation) increased Pvo2across temperatures in reference fish, but heart rate still declined at a similar temperature. CTmaxof reference fish increased slightly (by 0.9°C) in hyperoxia, but remained significantly lower than in Biotest fish despite an improved cardiac output due to an elevated stroke volume. Thus, while cardiac oxygen supply appears critical to elevate stroke volume at high temperatures, oxygen limitation may not explain the bradycardia and arrhythmia that occur prior to CTmax. Acute thermal tolerance and its thermal plasticity can, therefore, only be partially attributed to cardiac failure from myocardial oxygen limitations, and likely involves limiting factors on multiple organizational levels.

History

Journal

American Journal of Physiology - Regulatory Integrative and Comparative Physiology

Volume

311

Issue

2

Pagination

R440 - R449

Publisher

AMER PHYSIOLOGICAL SOC

Location

United States

ISSN

0363-6119

eISSN

1522-1490

Language

English

Publication classification

C Journal article; C1.1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Copyright notice

2016, American Physiological Society