2004
DOI: 10.1152/ajpheart.00379.2004
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Isolation of interstitial fluid from skeletal muscle and subcutis in mice using a wick method

Abstract: Markhus, Carl Erik, and Helge Wiig. Isolation of interstitial fluid from skeletal muscle and subcutis in mice using a wick method. Am J Physiol Heart Circ Physiol 287: H2085-H2090, 2004. First published June 24, 2004 doi:10.1152/ajpheart.00379.2004.-Until recent years, mice were sparsely used in physiological experiments, and therefore, data on the basic cardiovascular parameters of mice are lacking. Our aim was to gain access to interstitial fluid and thereby study transcapillary fluid dynamics in this speci… Show more

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Cited by 9 publications
(6 citation statements)
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“…Interstitial fluid pressure was measured by micropipettes, 7 and interstitial fluid was sampled with implanted wicks 8 or by tissue centrifugation. 9 Tissue fluid volumes were measured with radioactive tracers or by weighing, 4 and COPs on a colloid osmometer designed for submicroliter samples.…”
Section: Interstitial Fluid and Tissue Analysesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Interstitial fluid pressure was measured by micropipettes, 7 and interstitial fluid was sampled with implanted wicks 8 or by tissue centrifugation. 9 Tissue fluid volumes were measured with radioactive tracers or by weighing, 4 and COPs on a colloid osmometer designed for submicroliter samples.…”
Section: Interstitial Fluid and Tissue Analysesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Access to native interstitial fluid was crucial here. Since the major changes in transcapillary fluid parameters were found in body areas where use of other methods like wicks would have been difficult (Markhus & Wiig, 2004), we used a newly developed centrifugation method (Wiig et al 2003) to isolate skin interstitial fluid. In our method evaluation study we found that less than 2% of the fluid isolated by centrifugation of skin at g < 424 derived from plasma, showing that the contamination from plasma is negligible.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…These authors also showed that the insertion resulted in an inflammatory reaction that was later avoided by performing experiments in rats after arresting the circulation (249,499) in skin and combined with catheters for muscle im-plantation (284,511). In peritoneum, where pressures determining fluid flux are of special interest due to the importance for determining fluid exchange in peritoneal dialysis, COP if was 60% of that in plasma in the control situation, falling to 28% after a 4-h peritoneal dialysis dwell (394).…”
Section: Wick Techniquesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Although the in vitro data suggest that the protein recovery is high and severalfold that of microdialysis (415), the protein concentration in the fluid sampled fluid is, however, 1/300 or less of the interstitial fluid concentration as estimated from COP if in mouse subcutaneous wick fluid (284,439) and the Landis-Pappenheimer equation for relationship between plasma protein concentration and COP (255). A likely explanation for this finding is that the negative pressure used during the ultrafiltration induces an increased capillary filtration, resulting in sieving of proteins at the capillary membrane, in the tissue, or at the tissue-membrane interface.…”
Section: Capillary Ultrafiltrationmentioning
confidence: 99%