THE RATE AND ROUTE OF FLUID RESORPTION FROM THE SUB-RETINAL SPACE OF THE RABBIT
- 1 January 1982
- journal article
- research article
- Vol. 22 (3) , 292-302
Abstract
Small nonrhegmatogenous detachments were formed in living rabbit eyes by injecting a few microliters of fluid into the subretinal space. The change in volume of these detachments was followed by sequential photogrammetric measurements. Detachments of 1-3 mm diameter filled with a balanced salt and glucose solution (Ames'' solution) resorbed at a constant rate over .apprx. 80 min of observation and appeared to be totally resorbed within 2-6 h. The rate at which fluid resorbed per unit area of pigment epithelium was consistent with the rate of resorption in other transporting epithelia as well as with clinical observations in humans. Detachments filled with isotonic sucrose resorbed much more slowly than those filled with saline solutions, suggesting that fluid resorption requires the passage of ions through cell membranes. Hypoxia markedly and reversibly reduced the rate of resorption, suggesting that active transport is involved in the removal of the saline solutions from the subretinal space. Anatomical and physiological evidence indicate that the site of active transport is the pigment epithelium. Active resorption of subretinal fluid is probably a factor in the maintenance of normal retinal adhesion.This publication has 4 references indexed in Scilit:
- THE EFFECT OF METABOLIC-INHIBITORS ON RETINAL ADHESION AND SUB-RETINAL FLUID RESORPTION1980
- The diffusion of potassium, sodium, sucrose and inulin in the extracellular spaces of mammalian tissuesBiochimica et Biophysica Acta, 1957
- STUDIES ON WATER AND ELECTROLYTES IN NERVOUS TISSUE: I. RABBIT RETINA: METHODS AND INTERPRETATION OF DATAJournal of Neurophysiology, 1956
- THE VELOCITY OF DISTRIBUTION OF SUCROSE BETWEEN PLASMA AND INTERSTITIAL FLUID, WITH REFERENCE TO THE USE OF SUCROSE FOR THE MEASUREMENT OF EXTRACELLULAR FLUID IN MAN 1Journal of Clinical Investigation, 1951