Capillary Exchange 2 Flashcards

1
Q

What is molecular permeability determined by?

A

Lipid solubility
Molecular size

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2
Q

What are the 3 classes of solutes?

A

Lipid soluble, small lipid insoluble, large lipid insoluble

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3
Q

How do lipid soluble molecules cross the cell membrane?

A

Diffuse through endothelial cell membrane - cell walls are lipid environments

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4
Q

How do small lipid insoluble molecules cross the cell membrane?

A

Require water filled channels to cross capillary wall

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5
Q

What is the small pore theory?

A

Capillary wall is penetrated by aqueous channels that occupy 0.01-0.04% of capillary surface area

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6
Q

How do large hydrophilic substances cross the cell membrane?

A

Diffuse across capillary wall through large pores
1 per 4000 small pores

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7
Q

Where are the likely routes to find large pores?

A

Intercellular junctions
Fenestrae
Transcellular channels

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8
Q

What is the Glycocalyx

A

Barrier made up of macromolecules that covers entrance of intracellular junction and fenestrae
Carries a negative charge

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9
Q

What is the effect of the glycocalyx on the diffusion of large lipid insoluble molecules?

A

Reduces effective width of the junctions and fenestrae
Steric hindrance and electrostatic repulsion

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10
Q

What do intratissue permeability differences arise from?

A

Differences in pore numbers

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11
Q

What are aquaporin channels?

A

Channels specific for water
Glycoprotein, aquaporin-1
Regulate diffusion

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12
Q

What is convective transport?

A

Solute transport by solvent drag
Rate determined by filtration rate and reflection coefficient

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13
Q

How are lipophilic solutes exchanged in the BBB?

A

Transcellular exchange - passive diffusion

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14
Q

How are hydrophilic solutes exchanged in the BBB in continuous capillaries?

A

Carrier proteins

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15
Q

How are hydrophilic solutes exchanged in the BBB in fenestrated capillaries?

A

Passive diffusion (only a few sites)

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16
Q

What is equilibration?

A

No net flow back and forth
CA & CV = Ci

17
Q

What happens when the rate of blood flow increases?

A

Equilibration occurs further along capillary
More exchange/clearance occurs

18
Q

What type of relationship does solute clearance and flow have?

A

Linear relationship as long as equilibration occurs
Flow-limited exchange

19
Q

What happens when the blood flow becomes too fast?

A

Equilibration doesn’t occur
Less of a reduction in blood concentration
Diffusion limited exchange

20
Q

What solutes are involved with flow-limited exchange?

A

Lipophilic solutes
Very small hydrophilic solutes
Cross wall very easily
Equilibration occurs early

21
Q

What solutes are involved with diffusion-limited exchange?

A

Large hydrophilic solutes (normal transit time)
Small hydrophilic solutes (shortened transit times) - blood flow increased