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Subpleural microvascular flow velocities and shear rates in normal and septic mechanically ventilated rats
Authors:Waisman Dan  Abramovich Amir  Brod Vera  Lavon Ofir  Nurkin Steven  Popovski Faina  Rotschild Avi  Bitterman Haim
Institution:Ischemia-Shock Research Laboratory, Carmel Medical Center, The Bruce and Ruth Rappaport Faculty of Medicine, Technion-Israel Institute of Technology, Haifa 34362, Israel.
Abstract:Changes in pulmonary microhemodynamics are important variables in a large variety of pathological processes. We used in vivo fluorescent videomicroscopy of the subpleural microvasculature in mechanically ventilated rats to directly monitor microvascular flow velocity (FV) and shear rate in pulmonary arterioles, capillaries, and venules in healthy rats and in septic rats 20 h after cecal ligation and puncture (CLP). Observations were made through a small thoracotomy after injection of fluorescent microspheres (D = 1 microm) into the systemic circulation. The FVs were calculated off-line by frame-by-frame measurements of the distance covered by individual microspheres per unit of time. In healthy rats, inspiratory FV were 1322 +/- 142 microm/s in subpleural arterioles and 599 +/- 25 microm/s in capillaries. The highest FV was found in venules (1552 +/- 132 microm/s). The calculated shear rates were 547 +/- 62/s in arterioles and 619 +/- 19/s in capillaries. The highest shear rates were detected in venules (677 +/- 59/s). No significant changes in FV and shear rates were observed throughout the 1-h observation period in any of the microvascular compartments. Pulmonary microvascular FV and shear rates found in sham-operated rats in the CLP experiments were not significantly different from values of healthy rats. The CLP caused a significant increase in leukocyte sequestration in the lungs and a mean of 27% to 34% decrease in FV in all sections of the pulmonary microvasculature (P < 0.001 in capillaries and P < 0.05 in venules). Also, CLP caused a 23% decrease in capillary shear rate that reached only borderline statistical significance (P < 0.06) and a significant 35% decrease in mean shear rate in venules (P < 0.05). Fluorescent videomicroscopy is offered as a stable and reproducible method for in vivo determinations of pulmonary microhemodynamics in clinically relevant models of sepsis.
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