Whole-Body Systemic Transcapillary Filtration Rates, Coefficients, and Isogravimetric Capillary Pressures in Bufo marinus and Rana catesbeiana
Whole-body and organ-level transcapillary filtration rates and coefficients are virtually unexamined in ectothermal vertebrates. These filtration rates appear to be greater than in mammals when plasma volume shifts and lymphatic function are analyzed. Gravimetric techniques monitoring whole-body mas...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Physiological and biochemical zoology 2000-03, Vol.73 (2), p.161-168 |
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Zusammenfassung: | Whole-body and organ-level transcapillary filtration rates and coefficients are virtually unexamined in ectothermal vertebrates. These filtration rates appear to be greater than in mammals when plasma volume shifts and lymphatic function are analyzed. Gravimetric techniques monitoring whole-body mass changes were used to estimate net systemic filtration in Bufo marinus and Rana catesbeiana while perfusing with low-protein Ringer's and manipulating venous pressure. Capillary pressures were estimated from arterial and venous pressures after measuring the venous to arterial resistance ratio of 0.23. The capillary filtration coefficient (CFC) for the two species was
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$$25.2\pm 1.47$$
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mL min−1 kg−1 kPa−1. Isogravimetric capillary pressure (Pci), the pressure at which net fluid is neither filtered nor reabsorbed, was
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$$1.12\pm 0.054$$
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kPa and was confirmed by an independent method. None of these variables showed a significant interspecific difference. The anuran CFC and Pci are significantly higher than those found using the same method on rats (
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ISSN: | 1522-2152 1537-5293 |
DOI: | 10.1086/316732 |