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  • Effects of perfusion rate on permeability of frog and rat mesenteric microvessels to sodium fluorescein.

Effects of perfusion rate on permeability of frog and rat mesenteric microvessels to sodium fluorescein.

The Journal of physiology (2002-09-17)
D Montermini, C P Winlove, C Michel
ABSTRACT

The permeability, P(S), to sodium fluorescein (Stokes-Einstein radius = 0.45 nm) has been measured in single mesenteric capillaries of pithed frogs and anaesthetised rats as perfusion velocity, U, was varied over a range from 400 up to 2000-10,000 microm s(-1). P(S) increased linearly with U. In 20 frog capillaries, mean (+/- S.E.M.) P(S) (in microm s(-1)) = 9.35 (+/- 1.55)U x 10(-5) + 0.244 (+/- 0.0291). Similarly, in nine rat venules, mean P(S) = 1.62 (+/- 0.385)U x 10(-4) + 0.375 (+/- 0.025). The flow-dependent component of permeability could be reversibly abolished in frog capillaries by superfusing with 100 microM noradrenaline and by superfusing rat venules with the nitric oxide synthase inhibitor, N(G)-nitro-L-arginine (20 microM). It was shown that changes in microvascular pressure accompanying changes in U during free perfusion could account for only 15 % of the changes in P(S), i.e. 85 % of the changes in P(S) were changes in the permeability coefficient itself. A comparison between the changes in P(S) with U and the previously described changes in microvascular permeability to K(+) with U, suggest that if the flow-dependent component of permeability is modelled as a population of pores of constant size, these have radii of 0.8 nm. Such a pathway would limit flow-dependent permeability to small hydrophilic molecules and have minimal effect on net fluid exchange.