Work

Snake Constriction Rapidly Induces Circulatory Arrest in Rats

Public Deposited

This published version is made available on Dickinson Scholar with the permission of the publisher. For more information on the published version, visit The Company of Biologist's Website.

As legless predators, snakes are unique in their ability to immobilize and kill their prey through the process of constriction, and yet how this pressure incapacitates and ultimately kills the prey remains unknown. In this study, we examined the cardiovascular function of anesthetized rats before, during and after being constricted by boas (Boa constrictor) to examine the effect of constriction on the prey's circulatory function. The results demonstrate that within 6 s of being constricted, peripheral arterial blood pressure (PBP) at the femoral artery dropped to 1/2 of baseline values while central venous pressure (CVP) increased 6-fold from baseline during the same time. Electrocardiographic recordings from the anesthetized rat's heart revealed profound bradycardia as heart rate (fH) dropped to nearly half of baseline within 60 s of being constricted, and QRS duration nearly doubled over the same time period. By the end of constriction (mean 6.5 +/- 1 min), rat PBP dropped 2.9-fold, fH dropped 3.9-fold, systemic perfusion pressure (SPP=PBP-CVP) dropped 5.7-fold, and 91% of rats (10 of 11) had evidence of cardiac electrical dysfunction. Blood drawn immediately after constriction revealed that, relative to baseline, rats were hyperkalemic (serum potassium levels nearly doubled) and acidotic (blood pH dropped from 7.4 to 7.0). These results are the first to document the physiological response of prey to constriction and support the hypothesis that snake constriction induces rapid prey death due to circulatory arrest.

Boback, Scott M., Katelyn J. McCann, Kevin A. Wood, Patrick M. McNeal, Emmett L. Blankenship, and Charles F. Zwemer. Snake Constriction Rapidly Induces Circulatory Arrest in Rats. Journal of Experimental Biology 218 (2015): 2279-2288.


MLA citation style (9th ed.)

McNeal, Patrick M, et al. Snake Constriction Rapidly Induces Circulatory Arrest In Rats. . 2015. dickinson.hykucommons.org/concern/generic_works/5e8c3892-949d-49d1-ad9a-65d81ca18739.

APA citation style (7th ed.)

M. P. M, W. K. A, B. S. M, B. E. L, Z. C. F, & M. K. J. (2015). Snake Constriction Rapidly Induces Circulatory Arrest in Rats. https://dickinson.hykucommons.org/concern/generic_works/5e8c3892-949d-49d1-ad9a-65d81ca18739

Chicago citation style (CMOS 17, author-date)

McNeal, Patrick M., Wood, Kevin A., Boback, Scott M., Blankenship, Emmett L., Zwemer, Charles F., and McCann, Katelyn J.. Snake Constriction Rapidly Induces Circulatory Arrest In Rats. 2015. https://dickinson.hykucommons.org/concern/generic_works/5e8c3892-949d-49d1-ad9a-65d81ca18739.

Note: These citations are programmatically generated and may be incomplete.