K. Aukland et al., RENAL CORTICAL INTERSTITIUM AND FLUID ABSORPTION BY PERITUBULAR CAPILLARIES, The American journal of physiology, 266(2), 1994, pp. 60000175-60000184
Every minute, the cortical peritubular capillaries in a 1-g rat kidney
take up more than 0.5 ml tubular reabsorbate. Studies of renal lymph
and measurements of pressure in capillaries (P-c) and interstitium (P-
i) indicate that normally the protein colloid osmotic pressure of peri
tubular capillary plasma (COPp) provides the necessary absorptive forc
e, keeping P-i at 2-4 mmHg, i.e., 8-10 mmHg lower than P-c. At reduced
COPp, continued delivery of fluid from the tubules automatically rais
es P-i to maintain capillary fluid uptake. The transient P-i response
to sudden exposure of the kidney to subatmospheric pressure shows that
such adjustment of forces may take place in only 5 s. Most remarkable
, reabsorption continues during protein-free perfusion of the isolated
rat kidney, apparently effected by a P-i exceeding P-c. A relative re
tardation of interstitial uptake of ferritin from plasma in this case
suggests fluid reabsorption through both small and large pores in the
capillary wall. Collapse of the capillaries is presumably prevented by
tight tethering to the capillary wall, giving the narrow interstitium
a very low compliance.