Disturbance of CO2 elimination in the lungs by carbonic anhydrase inhibition.

1986 
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 PCO2 difference (a-ADCO2), and physiological VD/VT ratio increased progressively to 52.0±2.1Torr, 58.0±3.0Torr, 23.4±1.2Torr, 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±1.8Torr (S.E.) upon the first injection of 5mg/kg of acetazolamide, but PACO2 did not change further upon 3 additional 5mg/kg injections. Mixed venous-arterial PCO2 difference ((v-a)PCO2), VCO2, and anatomical VD/VT ratio were unchanged by the administration of any doses of acetazolamide.
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