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  4. Interstitial Fluid And Lymph Formation And Transport: Physiological Regulation And Roles In Inflammation And Cancer
 
review article

Interstitial Fluid And Lymph Formation And Transport: Physiological Regulation And Roles In Inflammation And Cancer

Wiig, Helge
•
Swartz, Melody A.  
2012
Physiological Reviews

Wiig H, Swartz MA. Interstitial Fluid and Lymph Formation and Transport: Physiological Regulation and Roles in Inflammation and Cancer. Physiol Rev 92: 1005-1060, 2012; doi: 10.1152/physrev.00037.2011.-The interstitium describes the fluid, proteins, solutes, and the extracellular matrix (ECM) that comprise the cellular micro-environment in tissues. Its alterations are fundamental to changes in cell function in inflammation, pathogenesis, and cancer. Interstitial fluid (IF) is created by transcapillary filtration and cleared by lymphatic vessels. Herein we discuss the biophysical, biomechanical, and functional implications of IF in normal and pathological tissue states from both fluid balance and cell function perspectives. We also discuss analysis methods to access IF, which enables quantification of the cellular microenvironment; such methods have demonstrated, for example, that there can be dramatic gradients from tissue to plasma during inflammation and that tumor IF is hypoxic and acidic compared with subcutaneous IF and plasma. Accumulated recent data show that IF and its convection through the interstitium and delivery to the lymph nodes have many and diverse biological effects, including in ECM reorganization, cell migration, and capillary morphogenesis as well as in immunity and peripheral tolerance. This review integrates the biophysical, biomechanical, and biological aspects of interstitial and lymph fluid and its transport in tissue physiology, pathophysiology, and immune regulation.

  • Details
  • Metrics
Type
review article
DOI
10.1152/physrev.00037.2011
Web of Science ID

WOS:000306566500002

Author(s)
Wiig, Helge
Swartz, Melody A.  
Date Issued

2012

Published in
Physiological Reviews
Volume

92

Start page

1005

End page

1060

Subjects

Endothelial Growth-Factor

•

Colloid Osmotic-Pressure

•

Vascular-Permeability Factor

•

Suction Blister Fluid

•

Rat Skeletal-Muscle

•

Potential Therapeutic Consequences

•

Mass-Spectrometric Proteomics

•

Heparan-Sulfate Proteoglycans

•

Human Microvascular Exchange

•

Rabbit Subcutaneous Tissue

Editorial or Peer reviewed

NON-REVIEWED

Written at

EPFL

EPFL units
LLCB  
Available on Infoscience
August 17, 2012
Use this identifier to reference this record
https://infoscience.epfl.ch/handle/20.500.14299/84907
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