Effect of acute altitude hypoxia on fatty acid proportion in the plasma of rats of different ages.

1986 
: Using gas chromatography, the authors studied the development of the proportion of 25 saturated and non-saturated fatty acids in the plasma of Wistar rats of their own breed aged 5, 10, 14 and 25 days and adult (both sexes), and in three age groups (5 and 14 day and adult) they determined the effect of acute altitude hypoxia. Fatty acids were determined as methylesters (FAME) (Base 1978), using the method already described by Smidova et al. (1984a), in mixed blood plasma obtained from decapitated control and experimental animals. Altitude hypoxia, which corresponded to 9 000 m, lasted 20 min. The temperature was kept stable at 25 degrees C. Marked changes occurred during ontogenesis in the proportion of total fatty acids (TFA) in the plasma; the proportion of sigma non-saturated FA fell significantly during maturation, chiefly in favour of monoene FA, with a resultant significant drop in their reciprocal index (sigma saturated/sigma monoene). The proportion of all saturated FA amounted in 5-day-old rats to 54% of the total quantity, but in adult rats to only 40%. Acute hypoxia had a demonstrable effect in all three age categories. In 5-day-old rats it led to significant changes in 7 FA and in adult rats in 10. In both 5-day-old and adult animals it produced an increase in the arachidonic acid level. The results are discussed in relation to previous findings on the effect of the same hypoxia on FA proportion in various parts of the CNS of rats of different ages.
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