Dear MARMAM community,

I am happy to announce our new publication in JEZ-A: Ecological and Integrative 
Physiology titled “Ultrasound images of the ascending aorta of anesthetized 
northern fur seals and Steller sea lions confirm that the aortic bulb maintains 
continuous blood flow”.

Abstract

The increased size and enhanced compliance of the aortic bulb—the enlargement 
of the ascending aorta—are believed to maintain blood flow in pinnipeds during 
extended periods of diastole induced by diving bradycardia. The aortic bulb has 
been described ex vivo in several species of pinnipeds, but in vivo 
measurements are needed to investigate the relationship between structure and 
function. We obtained ultrasound images using electrocardiogram-gated 
transesophageal echocardiography during anesthesia and after atropine 
administration to assess the relationship between aortic bulb anatomy and 
cardiac function (heart rate, stroke volume, cardiac output) in northern fur 
seals (Callorhinus ursinus) and Steller sea lions (Eumetopias jubatus). We 
observed that the aortic bulb in northern fur seals and Steller sea lions 
expands during systole and recoils over the entire diastolic period indicating 
that blood flow is maintained throughout the entire cardiac cycle as expected. 
The stroke volumes we measured in the fur seals and sea lions fit the values 
predicted based on body size in mammals and did not change with increased heart 
rates, suggesting that greater stroke volumes are not needed for aortic bulb 
function. Overall, our results suggest that peripheral vasoconstriction during 
diving is sufficient to modulate the volume of blood in the aortic bulb to 
ensure that flow lasts over the entire diastolic period. These results indicate 
that the shift of blood into the aortic bulb of pinnipeds is a fundamental 
mechanism caused by vasoconstriction while diving, highlighting the importance 
of this unique anatomical adaptation.

The paper is available open access here: 
https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/full/10.1002/jez.2799 
<https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/full/10.1002/jez.2799> 

Citation

Storlund RL, Rosen DAS, Haulena M, Sanatani S, Vander Zaag J, Trites AW. 2024. 
Ultrasound images of the ascending aorta of anesthetized northern fur seals and 
Steller sea lions confirm that the aortic bulb maintains continuous blood flow. 
J Exp Zool Pt A:1–12.

All the best,
Rhea

Rhea Storlund, MSc
PhD Candidate (Zoology)
Marine Mammal Research Unit
Traditional xʷməθkʷəy̓əm Territory
The University of British Columbia
r.storl...@oceans.ubc.ca <mailto:r.storl...@oceans.ubc.ca> 

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