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Department of Bioengineering and Institute for Biomedical Engineering, University of California, San Diego, La Jolla 92093-0412; and Alliance Pharmaceutical, San Diego, California 92121
Received 25 April 1996; accepted in final form 14 June 1996.
Ikomi, Fumitaka, James Hunt, Gayda Hanna, and Geert W. Schmid-Schönbein. Interstitial fluid, plasma protein,
colloid, and leukocyte uptake into initial lymphatics.
J. Appl. Physiol. 81(5):
2060-2067, 1996.
Lymphatics serve to remove from the interstitium a range of materials, including plasma proteins, colloid materials, and
cells. Lymph flow rates can be enhanced by periodic tissue compression
or venous pressure elevation, but little is known to what degree
enhancement of lymph flow affects material transport. The objective was
to examine the uptake of plasma proteins, a colloidal perflubron
emulsion (LA-11063, mean particle diameter = 0.34 µm), and leukocytes
into lymphatics. Prenodal collecting lymphatics in the lower hindlimb
of rabbits were cannulated with and without foot massage and after
elevation of venous pressure (40 mmHg). The average lymph flow rates
were elevated ~22-fold by the skin massage but only about threefold
by venous pressure elevation. Lymph-to-plasma protein concentration
ratio remained unchanged by the massage but decreased significantly
after venous pressure elevation. Lymph colloid concentration and
leukocyte counts were elevated on average 47 and 8.5 times,
respectively, by foot massage, but both decreased after venous pressure
elevation. These results suggest that skin movement by massage and
elevation of the venous pressure lead to opposite lymph transport
kinetics of protein, colloids, and cells. Massage is more effective to enhance material transport out of the interstitium into the initial lymphatics.
rabbit skin; skin massage; lymph formation; collecting lymphatics; perfluorocarbon; lymph fluid
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