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  • 1
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    Anatomy and embryology 200 (1999), S. 425-432 
    ISSN: 1432-0568
    Keywords: Keywords Pulmonary veins ; Lymphatics ; Corrosion casting ; Scanning electron microscopy ; Pulmonary edema
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract  Extravascular lung liquid must rely on tissue-space pressure gradients to drive it into the lymphatics because the fluid is outside the lymphatic contractile pumping and valve control. Focal tissue pressure changes could result from muscular contraction in the blood vessel walls. Perivascular lymphatics usually lie within the adventitia of pulmonary blood vessels, and are generally more noticeable in veins than arteries. Spontaneously hypertensive rats have exaggerated focal pulmonary venous muscle (venous sphincters). These muscular tufts are often near initial lymphatics; if their contraction was important for lymph transport, spontaneously hypertensive rats could have more lymphatic filling in the areas of the pulmonary venous sphincters than normotensive rats. Because the focal muscularity is found in pulmonary veins more than arteries, veins may have more focal lymphatic filling than arteries. To test these hypotheses, lung histology and vascular and lymphatic casts of spontaneously hypertensive and normotensive rats were examined. Contracted venous sphincters were found on 108 of 127 veins with lymphatics in the spontaneously hypertensive rats and 5 of 41 in the normotensive rats P〈0.01). The spontaneously hypertensive rats had deeper venous contractions and more lymphatic filling around both arteries and veins (P〈0.01). In the hypertensive rats, the venous was greater than the arterial lymphatic filling (P〈0.01). On the pleural surface, hypertensive rats also had greater lymphatic filling than controls (P〈0.01). This anatomic evidence suggests that pulmonary venous sphinters are associated with focal lymphatic filling, and perivascular muscle action might be a component of the pulmonary lymphatic system.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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