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Vol. 284, Issue 2, 535-541, February 1998
University of Melbourne, Departments of Medicine (J.A.R., H.G.,
M.S.C., R.A.S.) and
Surgery (A.S.),
Austin and Repatriation Medical
Centre, and Victorian College of Pharmacy, Monash University (D.J.M.),
Melbourne, Australia
Propranolol extraction in vivo by the left lobe of the
fetal sheep liver is greater than that by the right lobe, and this may
be due to the fact that oxygenation of the left lobe is greater than
that of the right lobe. To explore this hypothesis, we studied the
elimination of (R)-(+)-propranolol (PROP) by right and
left lobes of the intact isolated perfused fetal sheep liver model, in
which there is equal oxygenation of both liver lobes. After isolation
of the liver, near-term fetal sheep livers (n = 11) were perfused (2.68 ± 1.05 ml/g liver/min) in situ
via the umbilical vein in a 1-liter recirculating
system. PROP was infused (1.2 mg/hr) into the reservoir after an
initial bolus dose (2.3 mg). Perfusate samples were taken from the
common and right and left hepatic veins every 10 min for determination
of PROP concentrations and oxygen consumption over the 180-min
experimental period. Mean ductus venosus shunt through the liver was
42 ± 21% of perfusate flow. Oxygen consumption was not
significantly different between the left and right lobes of the liver
(0.79 ± 0.46 and 0.67 ± 0.44 µmol/g liver/min,
respectively, P > .05), nor was there any significant difference
between lobes in PROP hepatic extraction at steady state (0.25 ± 0.20 and 0.25 ± 0.23, respectively, P > .05). This supports
the hypothesis that the difference between lobes in PROP extraction
in vivo may be due to the difference in degree of
oxygenation of the left and right lobes that is known to be present
in vivo.