BIOL 102 Lecture Notes - Lecture 19: Lymphedema, Extracellular Fluid, Osmotic Pressure

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1 Mar 2017
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Exchange is flow of interstitial fluid (tissue) and plasma (blood) through the very thin walls of the capillaries. Small molecules are exchanged but typically, most cells and large molecules do not move through the capillary wall. 60,000 miles of capillaries in an adult human. Each capillary has a diameter so narrow that blood cells must pass through in single file. Small, nonpolar, uncharged molecules (o2/ co2) move by diffusion. & small, charged or polar molecules move by pressure driven flow. Blood pressure forces plasma out of the capillaries into the interstitial fluid. Osmotic pressure forces interstitial fluid into the capillaries. Which pressure below is responsible for fluid moving back into the plasma for transport away from the tissues: osmotic pressure, blood pressure. Lymphatic vessels drain excess interstitial fluid away from tissues. Carry interstitial fluid back to the heart! Lymph nodes filter the fluid before it enters the circulatory system. Lymphedema is another medical issue that involves the lymphatic system.

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