Chapter 11 - Interstitial edema Flashcards
What are the most common conditions associated with interstitial edema formation (5)? Give relevant disease processes for each
- Venous hypertension (heart disease, venous thrombosis)
- Hypoproteinemia (protein-losing enteropathy and nepherectomy)
- Increased microvascular permeability (inflammation, infection)
- Impaired lymph flow (trauma, surgical damage, systemic venous hypertension, anesthesia)
- Inflammatory edema (inflammation, anaphylaxis, burn injury, frostbite)
Give the Starling-Landis equation modeling the microvascular filtration rate.
Jv = LpA [(Pmv - Pint) - σd (πp - πint)]
Jv: microvascular filtration
Lp: hydraulic conductivity
A: filtration surface area
Pmv and Pint: hydrostatic pressures within the microvessels and interstitial space
σd: osmotic reflexion coefficient
πp and πint: colloid osmotic pressure exerted by plasma and interstitial fluid
How does the glycocalyx affect the Starling-Landis principle?
- Endothelial glycocalyx acts like a primary barrier to microvascular filtration
- Oncotic gradient between intravascular and interstitial spaces is in reality set between the plasma and the glycocalyx rather than being trans-endothelial. Colloid osmotic pressure is lower within the protein-free glycocalyx fluid than within the interstitial fluid, thus increasing ∆π.
(3. In physiologic conditions, the glycocalyx retains a high reflection capability for albumin because of the high density of negative electric charges of its GAG side chains)
(see “Glycocalyx and sepsis-induced alterations in vascular permeability” Crit Care. 2015; 19(1): 26. )
In which tissue are found the lowest σd (high protein permeability) and highest σd (low protein permeability)?
Lowest σd (high protein permeability): liver
Highest σd (low protein permeability): brain
Define the Ohm’s law (modeling lymph flow)
QL = (Pint + Ppump - Psv)/RL
QL: lymph flow Pint: interstitial hydrostatic pressure Ppump: effective driving pressure generated by the cyclic intrinsic contraction and extrinsic compression of the lymphatic vessels Psv: systemic venous pressure RL: effective lymphatic resistance
What are the main intrinsic interdependant antiedema mechanisms (4) ?
- Increased interstitial hydrostatic pressure
- Increased lymph flow
- Decreased interstitial colloid osmotic pressure
- Increased transserosal flow in organs within potential place
(Little to no microvascular reabsorption)
True or False:
Increased stretch of lymphatic vessels stimulates increased strength and frequency of lymphatic contractions
Increased lymph flow (ex: edema-induced elevation in lymph flow) results in lymphatic relaxation
True - True
How does anesthesia contribute to edema formation?
Many anesthetic agents significantly reduce lymphatic pumping and thus increase lymphatic sensitivity to venous hypertension (ex: induced by intravenous crystalloid administration)
Which tissue are the most sensitive to an inflammatory-induced interstitial pressure-volume relationship change?
Skin, tracheal mucosa
Give two reasons why interstitial edema is hard to predict and manage?
- More than one mechanism of edema formation is often involved
- Disease conditions that last for more than 1 to 2 days can induce adaptative responses i the interstitial fluid balance system that diminish clinical predictive accuracy