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Dextran, gelatin, and hydroxyethyl starch do not affect permeability for albumin in cat skeletal muscle

Author

Summary, in English

OBJECTIVE: To evaluate the effects of the three commercially available colloid solutions, 6% dextran 70, 6% hydroxyethyl starch (HES) 200/0.5, and 3.5% urea-linked gelatin on permeability for human albumin in a skeletal muscle in vivo model by evaluating their effects on the reflection coefficient for albumin. DESIGN: Controlled laboratory study. SETTING: University research laboratory. SUBJECTS: Eighteen adult cats. INTERVENTIONS: The autoperfused and denervated calf muscles of the cat hindlimb were placed in a plethysmograph. The transvascular fluid absorption induced by an increase in the colloid osmotic pressure following a fixed intravenous bolus of human albumin was analyzed, first before start of, and then during an intra-arterial infusion to, the muscle preparation of the synthetic colloid to be analyzed. Capillary filtration coefficient as a measure of microvascular fluid permeability (conductance) was analyzed before and after start of the synthetic colloid. MEASUREMENTS AND MAIN RESULTS: Arterial blood flow, arterial and venous blood pressures, total vascular resistance, tissue volume changes, capillary filtration coefficient, and plasma volume were measured before and during the colloid infusion. According to the Starling fluid equilibrium, the ratio between the reflection coefficients for albumin on two occasions (before and after infusion of the synthetic colloid) can be calculated from the maximum osmotic absorption rates induced by a fixed intravenous bolus infusion of albumin and from the capillary filtration coefficients. Obtained data were adjusted for different plasma volume at the two occasions. We found that none of the three synthetic colloids analyzed had any significant effect on the reflection coefficient for albumin. CONCLUSION: An effect on albumin microvascular permeability of the synthetic colloids dextran 70, HES 200/0.5, and urea-linked gelatin could not be shown by a method analyzing their effect on the reflection coefficient for albumin.

Publishing year

2001

Language

English

Pages

123-128

Publication/Series

Critical Care Medicine

Volume

29

Issue

1

Document type

Journal article

Publisher

Lippincott Williams & Wilkins

Topic

  • Anesthesiology and Intensive Care

Keywords

  • albumin
  • blood flow
  • capillary permeability
  • capillary filtration coefficient
  • colloids
  • dextran
  • fluid therapy
  • gelatin
  • hydroxyethyl starch
  • reflection coefficient
  • skeletal muscle

Status

Published

ISBN/ISSN/Other

  • ISSN: 1530-0293