Abstract

The pleural space separating the lung and chest wall of mammals contains a small amount of liquid that lubricates the pleural surfaces during breathing. Recent studies have pointed to a conceptual understanding of the pleural space that is different from the one advocated some 30 years ago in this journal. The fundamental concept is that pleural surface pressure, the result of the opposing recoils of the lung and chest wall, is the major determinant of the pressure in the pleural liquid. Pleural liquid is not in hydrostatic equilibrium because the vertical gradient in pleural liquid pressure, determined by the vertical gradient in pleural surface pressure, does not equal the hydrostatic gradient. As a result, a viscous flow of pleural liquid occurs in the pleural space. Ventilatory and cardiogenic motions serve to redistribute pleural liquid and minimize contact between the pleural surfaces. Pleural liquid is a microvascular filtrate from parietal pleural capillaries in the chest wall. Homeostasis in pleural liquid volume is achieved by an adjustment of the pleural liquid thickness to the filtration rate that is matched by an outflow via lymphatic stomata.

Highlights

  • The fundamental concept is that pleural surface pressure, the result of the opposing recoils of the lung and chest wall, is the major determinant of the pressure in the pleural liquid

  • A viscous flow of pleural liquid occurs in the pleural space

  • Pleural liquid is a microvascular filtrate from parietal pleural capillaries in the chest wall

Read more

Summary

Concluding Remarks

The fundamental concept is that pleural surface pressure, the result of the opposing recoils of the lung and chest wall, is the major determinant of the pressure in the pleural liquid. Pleural liquid is not in hydrostatic equilibrium because the vertical gradient in pleural liquid pressure, determined by the vertical gradient in pleural surface pressure, does not equal the hydrostatic gradient. A viscous flow of pleural liquid occurs in the pleural space. Pleural liquid is a microvascular filtrate from parietal pleural capillaries in the chest wall. Homeostasis in pleural liquid volume is achieved by an adjustment of the pleural liquid thickness to the filtration rate that is matched by an outflow via lymphatic stomata

INTRODUCTION
Historical Perspective
Regional Lung Volume and Pleural Pressure
The Question of Pleural Contact
Measurements of Pleural Pressure
Method
Lobar margins
Zone of apposition of rib cage to the diaphragm
PLEURAL LIQUID THICKNESS AND LUBRICATION
Effect of ventilation
Microvascular filtration
Cell composition
Energy dissipation
Pleural liquid volume
Microvilli
Hyaluronan as a Pleural Lubricant
CIRCULATION OF PLEURAL LIQUID
Gravity-Dependent Flows
Upward Flow Along Lobar Margins
Transverse Flows: the Ventilatory Pump
Fluid Volume Homeostasis
Pleural Anatomy and Blood Supply
Transport Equations
The Starling equation
The solute flux equation
Hydraulic conductivity
Reflection coefficient
Diffusive permeability
Pleural filtration pressure
Filtration and absorption rates
Regional absorption
Role of lymphatics
PLEURAL LIQUID PROTEIN CONCENTRATION
Effect of body size
Effect of vascular pressure
Regional differences
Active protein transport
Active liquid absorption
Findings
CONCLUDING REMARKS
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call