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American Zoologist 1997 37(1):101-108; doi:10.1093/icb/37.1.101
© 1997 by The Society for Integrative and Comparative Biology
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The Optimal Oxygen Equilibrium Curve: A Comparison Between Environmental Hypoxia and Anemia1

COLIN JOHN BRAUNER* and TOBIAS WANG{dagger}
*Department of Zoophysiology, Aarhus University 8000 Aarhus C. Denmark
{dagger}Institute of Biology, University of Odense DK-5230 Odense M. Denmark

SYNOPSIS. Internal hypoxia in vertebrates occurs during anemia, when blood oxygen (02) carrying capacity is reduced, or during exposure to environmental hypoxia. In non-altitude adapted vertebrates, exposure to environmental hypoxia results in a change in blood O2 affinity which, in some cases is beneficial to tissue O2 delivery. In contrast, the elevation in blood O2 carrying capacity observed in almost all vertebrates is always beneficial to tissue O2 delivery (assuming no large changes in blood viscosity) and may be more important than changes in blood O2 affinity in maintaining tissue O2 delivery.

Experimental anemia in vertebrates results in a decrease in blood O2 affinity which is always beneficial to tissue O2 delivery. The reduction in affinity is brought about by an increase in the organic phosphate to hemoglobin ratio (NTP:Hb) within the red cell. In fish NTP:Hb decreases during environmental hypoxia but increases during anemia indicating that NTP regulation is quite different between these treatments despite the similarity of these treatments at the tissue level.


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