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NATURE OF FLUIDS WHICH FUNCTIONALLY DISTEND THE KIDNEY

The nature of the fluid draining from the kidney, after its artery was occluded, was investigated. Samples of systemic arterial blood, renal venous blood and urine were also analyzed. It was found that the fluid draining from the kidney after occlusion is a mixture of vascular blood and another flui...

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Autores principales: Swann, H. G., Valdivia, Luis, Ormsby, A. A., Witt, W. T.
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: The Rockefeller University Press 1956
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2136641/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/13332178
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author Swann, H. G.
Valdivia, Luis
Ormsby, A. A.
Witt, W. T.
author_facet Swann, H. G.
Valdivia, Luis
Ormsby, A. A.
Witt, W. T.
author_sort Swann, H. G.
collection PubMed
description The nature of the fluid draining from the kidney, after its artery was occluded, was investigated. Samples of systemic arterial blood, renal venous blood and urine were also analyzed. It was found that the fluid draining from the kidney after occlusion is a mixture of vascular blood and another fluid designated as "diluting fluid," each contributing half to the composite mixture. In volume the mixture is 26 per cent of the functionally distended kidney. With the assumption that the renal extracellular fluid can be considered a simple mixture of blood plasma and a cell-free fluid, the composition of the "diluting fluid" was deduced from the known compositions of vascular blood and total fluid draining. The ratios of its content in a given substance to that in systemic (or renal venous) plasma are: for Na and Ca, 1.0; K, 1.5; Cl, 1.2; PO(4), 2.0; urea, 1.8; plasma protein, 0.3; albumin, 0.4; glucose, 0.4, and osmolarity, 1.2. The fluid bears little or no relation to urine, especially since the urine varied considerably between individual dogs whereas the "diluting fluid" was relatively constant in composition. It was also found that the hematocrit of the fluid draining after arterial occlusion progressively decreased as it flowed out, until the last portion contained only 5 per cent red cells. It is concluded that since renal lymph has approximately the same composition in protein, urea, glucose, and inulin as does "diluting fluid," the latter is, in all probability, renal interstitial fluid. Under the conditions of the experiment, it drains out of the kidney slowly relative to blood drainage. It is large in volume, particularly when compared with the capillaries that nourish it. Its high protein content explains the observation that the kidney is apparently naturally distended with a fluid disproportionately rich in plasma protein.
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spelling pubmed-21366412008-04-17 NATURE OF FLUIDS WHICH FUNCTIONALLY DISTEND THE KIDNEY Swann, H. G. Valdivia, Luis Ormsby, A. A. Witt, W. T. J Exp Med Article The nature of the fluid draining from the kidney, after its artery was occluded, was investigated. Samples of systemic arterial blood, renal venous blood and urine were also analyzed. It was found that the fluid draining from the kidney after occlusion is a mixture of vascular blood and another fluid designated as "diluting fluid," each contributing half to the composite mixture. In volume the mixture is 26 per cent of the functionally distended kidney. With the assumption that the renal extracellular fluid can be considered a simple mixture of blood plasma and a cell-free fluid, the composition of the "diluting fluid" was deduced from the known compositions of vascular blood and total fluid draining. The ratios of its content in a given substance to that in systemic (or renal venous) plasma are: for Na and Ca, 1.0; K, 1.5; Cl, 1.2; PO(4), 2.0; urea, 1.8; plasma protein, 0.3; albumin, 0.4; glucose, 0.4, and osmolarity, 1.2. The fluid bears little or no relation to urine, especially since the urine varied considerably between individual dogs whereas the "diluting fluid" was relatively constant in composition. It was also found that the hematocrit of the fluid draining after arterial occlusion progressively decreased as it flowed out, until the last portion contained only 5 per cent red cells. It is concluded that since renal lymph has approximately the same composition in protein, urea, glucose, and inulin as does "diluting fluid," the latter is, in all probability, renal interstitial fluid. Under the conditions of the experiment, it drains out of the kidney slowly relative to blood drainage. It is large in volume, particularly when compared with the capillaries that nourish it. Its high protein content explains the observation that the kidney is apparently naturally distended with a fluid disproportionately rich in plasma protein. The Rockefeller University Press 1956-07-01 /pmc/articles/PMC2136641/ /pubmed/13332178 Text en Copyright © Copyright, 1956, by The Rockefeller Institute for Medical Research New York This article is distributed under the terms of an Attribution–Noncommercial–Share Alike–No Mirror Sites license for the first six months after the publication date (see http://www.rupress.org/terms). After six months it is available under a Creative Commons License (Attribution–Noncommercial–Share Alike 4.0 Unported license, as described at http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Swann, H. G.
Valdivia, Luis
Ormsby, A. A.
Witt, W. T.
NATURE OF FLUIDS WHICH FUNCTIONALLY DISTEND THE KIDNEY
title NATURE OF FLUIDS WHICH FUNCTIONALLY DISTEND THE KIDNEY
title_full NATURE OF FLUIDS WHICH FUNCTIONALLY DISTEND THE KIDNEY
title_fullStr NATURE OF FLUIDS WHICH FUNCTIONALLY DISTEND THE KIDNEY
title_full_unstemmed NATURE OF FLUIDS WHICH FUNCTIONALLY DISTEND THE KIDNEY
title_short NATURE OF FLUIDS WHICH FUNCTIONALLY DISTEND THE KIDNEY
title_sort nature of fluids which functionally distend the kidney
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2136641/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/13332178
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