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Comparative Study
Pressure-flow analysis of portal vein and hepatic artery interactions in porcine liver.
- T Ayuse, N Brienza, C P O'Donnell, and J L Robotham.
- Department of Anesthesiology and Critical Care Medicine, Johns Hopkins Medical Institutions, Baltimore, Maryland 21287.
- Am. J. Physiol. 1994 Oct 1; 267 (4 Pt 2): H1233-42.
AbstractInteractions between the hepatic arterial and portal venous circulations were investigated in nine intact and eight isolated perfused porcine livers. Pressure-flow (P-Q) relationships were obtained in either the portal vein or hepatic artery with constant baseline or low flow in the other bed and a stable hepatic venous pressure (Phv). The slope was obtained by linear regression analysis of the P-Q relationship, and effective back pressure (Pback) was obtained from the pressure intercept for the portal vein and the measured zero-flow pressure for the hepatic artery. The Pback in the hepatic artery (13.4 +/- 1.5 mmHg) and the portal vein (4.6 +/- 0.3 mmHg) were higher than Phv (P < 0.05). Reducing portal vein flow (Qpv) produced an increase in hepatic artery flow (Qha) (P < 0.05) due only to a decrease in slope (P < 0.05). Decreasing Qha caused an identical change in Pback of the portal vein (P < 0.05) in the intact and isolated liver preparations. A change in Qpv alters the hepatic arterial resistance upstream from the site of a constant arterial Pback. Changes in total flow through the common sinusoidal compartment appear to alter the Pback of the portal vein via hydraulic mechanisms.
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