Panting and Selective brain cooling Flashcards
Define thermal panting
Increased respiratory evaporative heat loss due to increased respiratory minute volume
Define first phase panting; what happens to PETCO2/PaCO2
AKA thermal tachypnea: A rapid respiratory frequency accompanied by an increased respiratory minute volume and decreased tidal volume
- PETCO2/PaCO2 is maintained
Define second phase panting
AKA thermal hyperpnea: An increased tidal volume, increased alveolar ventilation
- PETCO2/PaCO2 is decreased
How does ventilation change relative to core temperature
- Ventilation increases proportionally to core temperature in humans
- i.e. as core temperature increases, ventilation increases (and PaCO2 decreases)
- Potential influence in brain to thorax temperature
What happens to blood flow as temperature increases; how can this be measured
- As temperature increases, blood flow increases (to brain and working muscles)
- This can be measured with intravenous 133Xe clearance and scintillation detectors
What is the relationship between core temperature, CO2 and phrenic nerve activity
- As Tc increases and PACO2 increases, phrenic nerve activity increases therefore increasing the depth of breathing
What does selective brain cooling mean
- Brain and body temperature are separated during exercise/body warming, meaning the brain stays cooler than the body
How do animals carry out selective brain cooling
- Countercurrent exchange via the nose and carotid rete
- Longer snout = greater SA for exchange
what is a countercurrent heat exchange
- crossover of heat between two opposing flows
- Gradual decline in the temperature differential
- the once hot and cold streams exit at the reversed temperature difference
Due to the absence of the carotid rete, what mechanisms might selective brain cooling occur in humans
- ventilation of the upper airways, surface cooling of sweat of the head
What is the importance of the cavernous sinuses
- The only anatomical location in which an artery travels completely through a venous structure
- Located at the base of the skull
Describe what may happen in animals when sympathetic activity is turned down/up in response to activity levels to facilitate SBC
- Down: Rest decreases SA, Angular oculi sphincter is relaxed via alpha R, while the facial vein sphincter is contracted via beta R. resulting in increased BF to the cavernous sinus promoting brain cooling
- Up: Exercise increases SA, angularis oculi sphincter contracts while the facial vein sphincter contracts therefore BF bypasses the cavernous sinus and inhibiting SBC
Where are the emissary veins located; In which direction do the emissary veins drain in hyperthermia vs hypothermia
Connect drainage from scalp to brain
Hyperthermia: inwards
Hypothermia: Outwards
What are three mechanisms in humans through which selective brain cooling might occur
- Cooling of venous blood by the skin which in turn cools the internal carotid blood supply to the brain
- Heat loss through the skull via emissary veins
- Heat loss via the upper/lower airways