Body water compartments in patients with obstructive jaundice. |
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Authors: | A Sitges-Serra X Carulla C Piera F Martínez-Ródenas G Franch J Pereira J M Gubern |
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Affiliation: | Department of Surgery, Hospital Universitari del Mar, Autonomous University of Barcelona, Spain. |
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Abstract: | To elucidate the pathogenesis of renal dysfunction associated with obstructive jaundice, body water compartments were measured using a multi-isotope dilution technique in ten patients with biliary tract obstruction and in ten control subjects matched for age, sex, weight, height and body surface area. Expressed as a fraction of body-weight, total body water was reduced in jaundiced patients (41.8 versus 46.2 per cent, P less than 0.02). Extracellular water volume was also reduced in patients with jaundice (20.3 versus 24.3 per cent, P less than 0.003) owing to a reduction of the interstitial space (16.1 versus 19.5 per cent, P less than 0.004) and, to a lesser degree, of the plasma volume (4.2 versus 4.8 per cent, P = 0.1). There was a close correlation in jaundiced patients between plasma volume and the creatinine clearance rate (r2 = 0.56, P less than 0.02) and between plasma volume and extracellular volume (r2 = 0.77, P less than 0.0001). Extracellular volume in such patients also correlated with the percentage weight loss (r2 = 0.42, P = 0.04). Obstructive jaundice is associated with a contracted extracellular water compartment, although extracellular water, as a percentage of body-weight, increased in proportion to the body-weight lost. Reduction of the interstitial volume and a marginally reduced plasma volume may be determinant factors in the pathogenesis of the renal and haemodynamic disturbances observed in patients with biliary tract obstruction. |
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