Comparison Between Lung Fluid Filtration Rate and Measured Starling Forces After Hemorrhagic and Endotoxic Shock
- 1 October 1980
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wolters Kluwer Health
- Vol. 20 (10) , 856-860
- https://doi.org/10.1097/00005373-198010000-00006
Abstract
The measurement of pulmonary vascular pressure and plasma oncotic pressure (pi p) is reported to be useful for predicting excess fluid transport across the pulmonary microcirculation in the critically ill. However, interpretation of change in these forces must take into consideration the compensatory changes in the other Starling forces, particularly interstitial oncotic pressure (pi i) and the permeability characteristics of the membrane. We calculated pulmonary microvascular pressure Pmv, pi p, and pi i in unanesthetized sheep with lung lymph fistulae. We altered Pmv by fluid loading and pi p by producing a severe hypoproteinemia after hemorrhagic shock and altered the membrane with endotoxin. We compared these with changes in the pulmonary transvascular fluid filtration rate (Qf). We found Pmv correlated very well with Qf during volume loading and during the post-shock hypoproteinemic state. pi i decreased in response to decreases in pi p, producing a relatively constant oncotic gradient (pi p-pi i). pi p then correlated very poorly with Qf when hypoproteinemia was present. There was essentially no correlation between any of the pressures and Qf after the severe permeability change produced by endotoxin.Keywords
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