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Effect of chronic sympathetic denervation upon the transcapillary filtration rate induced by venous stasis

26

Citations

17

References

1983

Year

Abstract

The effect of venous pressure elevation upon capillary filtration rate in the limb was studied in 6 chronically sympathectomized patients. Five healthy subjects served as controls. Volume changes of the forearm or calf were recorded by a strain-gauge plethysmograph. Relative blood flow in subcutaneous and muscle tissue during venous stasis was measured by the local 133Xe washout technique. In the denervated limbs there was a linear relationship between net capillary filtration rate and venous pressure elevation. In the controls a non-linear relationship was seen as venous pressure elevation of 40 mmHg only caused an increase in net filtration rate of about 66% of that expected from a linear relationship. In the denervated limbs of blood flow in muscle and subcutaneous tissue remained constant during venous pressure elevation of more than 30 mmHg whereas in the non-denervated limbs blood flow decreased by about 50% in both tissues. The results suggest that a local sympathetic veno-arteriolar (axon) reflex plays a dominant role for the reduced increase in net capillary filtration during large increases in venous pressure. The local axon reflex may therefore act as an edema protecting factor.

References

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