University College Dublin School of Medicine and Conway Institute, University College Dublin , Dublin , Ireland.
National Institute of Cellular Biotechnology, School of Biotechnology, Dublin City University , Dublin , Ireland.
Am J Physiol Lung Cell Mol Physiol. 2018 Oct 1;315(4):L476-L484. doi: 10.1152/ajplung.00437.2017. Epub 2018 May 24.
Fluid filtration in the pulmonary microcirculation depends on the hydrostatic and oncotic pressure gradients across the endothelium and the selective permeability of the endothelial barrier. Maintaining normal fluid balance depends both on specific properties of the endothelium and of the perfusing blood. Although some of the essential properties of blood needed to prevent excessive fluid leak have been identified and characterized, our understanding of these remains incomplete. The role of perfusate viscosity in maintaining normal fluid exchange has not previously been examined. We prepared a high-viscosity perfusion solution (HVS) with a relative viscosity of 2.5, i.e., within the range displayed by blood flowing in vessels of different diameters in vivo (1.5-4.0). Perfusion of isolated murine lungs with HVS significantly reduced the rate of edema formation compared with perfusion with a standard solution (SS), which had a lower viscosity similar to plasma (relative viscosity 1.5). HVS did not alter capillary filtration pressure. Increased endothelial shear stress produced by increasing flow rates of SS, to mimic the increased shear stress produced by HVS, did not reduce edema formation. HVS significantly reduced extravasation of Evans blue-labeled albumin compared with SS, indicating that it attenuated endothelial leak. These findings demonstrate for the first time that the viscosity of the solution perfusing the pulmonary microcirculation is an important physiological property contributing to the maintenance of normal fluid exchange. This has significant implications for our understanding of fluid homeostasis in the healthy lung, edema formation in disease, and reconditioning of donor organs for transplantation.
肺微循环中的液体滤过取决于内皮细胞两侧的流体静压和胶体渗透压梯度,以及内皮屏障的选择性通透性。维持正常的液体平衡既依赖于内皮细胞的特定性质,也依赖于灌流血液的特定性质。尽管已经确定并描述了一些防止过度液体渗漏所必需的血液基本特性,但我们对这些特性的理解仍不完整。灌流液黏度在维持正常液体交换中的作用尚未被研究过。我们制备了一种高黏度灌流液(HVS),其相对黏度为 2.5,即在体内不同直径血管中血流的黏度范围内(1.5-4.0)。与具有较低黏度(类似于血浆,相对黏度为 1.5)的标准溶液(SS)相比,用 HVS 灌注分离的小鼠肺显著降低了水肿形成的速度。HVS 并不改变毛细血管滤过压。通过增加 SS 的流速来模拟 HVS 产生的增加的剪切应力,从而增加内皮剪切应力,并没有减少水肿的形成。与 SS 相比,HVS 显著减少了 Evans 蓝标记白蛋白的外渗,表明其减轻了内皮渗漏。这些发现首次证明了灌注肺微循环的溶液的黏度是维持正常液体交换的一个重要生理特性。这对我们理解健康肺中的液体动态平衡、疾病中的水肿形成以及供体器官移植的再处理具有重要意义。