| Literature DB >> 33889604 |
Thomas E Woodcock1, C Charles Michel2.
Abstract
Ernest Starling first presented a hypothesis about the absorption of tissue fluid to the plasma within tissue capillaries in 1896. In this Chapter we trace the evolution of Starling's hypothesis to a principle and an equation, and then look in more detail at the extension of the Starling principle in recent years. In 2012 Thomas Woodcock and his son proposed that experience and experimental observations surrounding clinical practices involving the administration of intravenous fluids were better explained by the revised Starling principle. In particular, the revised or extended Starling principle can explain why crystalloid resuscitation from the abrupt physiologic insult of hypovolaemia is much more effective than the pre-revision Starling principle had led clinicians to expect. The authors of this chapter have since combined their science and clinical expertise to offer clinicians a better basis for their practice of rational fluid therapy.Entities:
Keywords: crystalloid and colloid infusion; fluid therapy; glycocalyx model; hypoalbuminaemia; oedema (edema); resuscitation; starling principle
Year: 2021 PMID: 33889604 PMCID: PMC8056939 DOI: 10.3389/fvets.2021.623671
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Vet Sci ISSN: 2297-1769
Figure 1Steady state and transient changes in fluid exchange with changes in microvascular pressure. Rapid changes in fluid filtration and absorption with step changes in pressure from the steady state are linear and indicated by the red arrows; rapid return to the original steady state pressure by the green arrows.
Figure 2Effects of prolonged fluid absorption on steady state relations between fluid exchange and microvascular pressure. From a position shown as point A on the initial steady state (solid) curve, a fall in mean microvascular pressure leads to a reversal of fluid exchange to fluid absorption (blue arrow) occurring at point B. If the fall in pressure is prolonged, fluid uptake dilutes the plasma protein concentration. Along with changes in the interstitial fluid, the colloid osmotic pressure difference falls, absorption rate falls and eventually reverses to a low level of filtration at point C on the new steady state curve (dashed), which has shifted to the left with the fall in plasma colloid osmotic pressure.
Figure 3The central volume of distribution Vc of an isosmotic colloid approximates to the free flowing plasma, while the Vc of an isotonic intravenous crystalloid infusion includes the whole of the intravascular space. The tissue volume of distribution Vt of a crystalloid infusion is limited to the expansile tissues, and is much less than the total extracellular fluid (ECF) volume.
Figure 4The top cartoon is a familiar illustration of the distribution of body water in original Starling physiology theory that implies that crystalloid solutions will be inefficient for resuscitation from a reduced plasma volume. The bottom cartoon, grounded in revised Starling physiology, explains the observed relative efficiencies of either colloid or crystalloid resuscitation.
A comparison of clinical expectations based upon the Original or Extended Starling principle paradigms.
| Intravascular volume consists of plasma and cellular elements. | Intravascular volume consists of glycocalyx volume, plasma volume, and cellular elements. |
| Capillaries separate plasma with high protein concentration from interstitial fluid (ISF) with low protein concentration. | Sinusoidal tissues (marrow, spleen, and liver) have |
| The important Starling forces are the transendothelial pressure difference and the plasma–interstitial colloid osmotic pressure difference operating across a porous endothelial barrier. | The important Starling forces are the transendothelial pressure difference and the plasma – subglycocalyx colloid osmotic pressure difference operating across the continuous glycocalyx. |
| Fluid is filtered from the arterial end of capillaries and absorbed from the venular end, while a small proportion returns to the circulation as lymph. | Transendothelial solvent filtration ( |
| Raising plasma colloid osmotic pressure enhances absorption and shifts fluid from ISF to plasma. | Raising plasma colloid osmotic pressure reduces |
| At subnormal capillary pressure, net absorption increases plasma volume. | At subnormal capillary pressure, |
| At supranormal capillary pressure, net filtration increases ISF volume. | At supranormal capillary pressure, when the colloid osmotic pressure difference is maximal, |
| Infused colloid solution is distributed through the plasma volume, and infused isotonic salt solution through the extracellular volume. | Infused colloid solution is initially distributed through the plasma volume, and infused isotonic salt solution through the intravascular volume. At supranormal capillary pressure, infusion of colloid solution preserves plasma colloid osmotic pressure, raises capillary pressure, and increases |