A sharp rise in portal vein pressure, not arterial constriction, initiates bile salt-induced pancreatic microcirculatory disturbance.
- Author:
Youdai CHEN
1
;
Huaiqing CHEN
;
Yunman TANG
;
Qiufen TU
;
Dongxia GE
;
Chang YU
;
Congxun JIANG
;
Shiping LIAO
;
Ron WANG
Author Information
1. Institute of Biomedical Engineering, Basic Medicine and Forensic Medicine College, Sichuan University, Chengdu 610041, China.
- Publication Type:Journal Article
- MeSH:
Animals;
Bile Acids and Salts;
adverse effects;
Hypertension, Portal;
complications;
Male;
Microcirculation;
drug effects;
physiology;
Pancreas;
blood supply;
Pancreatitis;
etiology;
physiopathology;
Portal Pressure;
Portal Vein;
physiopathology;
Rats;
Rats, Sprague-Dawley
- From:
Journal of Biomedical Engineering
2007;24(6):1280-1285
- CountryChina
- Language:Chinese
-
Abstract:
It was reported that pancreatic arteries constricted during the early phase of bile salt-induced acute pancreatitis (AP), leading to pancreatic microcirculatory disturbance. We conducted this experiment to verify whether the above-mentioned finding was true. AP was induced with intraductal injection of taurodeoxyholate. Small pancreatic artery pressure in dogs was recorded. Functional capillaries were counted and calibrated by multiplying wet weight of pancreas. Pancreatic perfusion was measured with Laser Doppler flowmeter. Pancreatic arterioles of rats dilated during the initial 20 min of AP, and pancreatic arterial pressure declined during the early phase of AP in dogs (from 104.5 +/- 4.8 mmHg to 54.6 +/- 5.6 mmHg). The hematocrit of blood from inferior vena cava was significantly lower than that of portal vein at 5 min after pancreatitis induction. The "true" pancreatic functional capillary density increased. The early pancreatic microcirculatory disturbance coincided with a marked increase of portal vein pressure (PVP) as high as 9.18 +/- 0.78 mmHg. Reduction of PVP to baseline level was followed by a marked increase of pancreatic perfusion (by 1.4-fold). Arterial dilatation, but not constriction, occurred during the early phase of bile salt-induced AP. The pancreatic microcirculatory disturbance was due to a marked rise in PVP that greatly reduced the pressure difference in the pancreatic blood vessels and increased plasma extravasation which led. to local hemoconcentration.