PLEURAL DISEASE
The pleural spaces are defined by the visceral pleura of the lungs and the parietal pleura of the rib cage, diaphragm, and mediastinum. The spaces themselves are potential rather than real,since the visceral and parietal pleura are normally separated by only a thin film of fluid.
The lung’s elastic recoil pulls the visceral pleura inward, and the chest wall’s recoil pulls the parietal pleura outward. The net pressure in the pleural space at functional residual capacity is below atmospheric pressure. In the pleural space fluid flows from the parietal surface into the pleural space, with subsequent reabsorption by the capillaries of the visceral pleura . This system is remarkably well-balanced and ordinarily prevents the collection of significant amounts of fluid despite the formation and absorption of 5 to 10 liters of pleural fluid each day. In addition, fluid and leakage of protein are drained by lymphatics, which can increase their absorptive capacity several-fold.
Fluid accumulates with abnormalities in hydrostatic and osmotic pressure, increased permeability of the capillaries, or lymphatic dysfunction. Pleural inflammation, either infectious or noninfectious, increases permeability and results in the collection of a high-protein pleural fluid. Alterations in the systemic and pulmonary venous pressures, as in heart failure, increase fluid transudation from the parietal capillaries and decrease reabsorption on the visceral side. Decreasing the osmotic pressure (hypoalbuminemia) may also result in more rapid fluid transudation. Finally, lymphatic dysfunction due to anatomical or functional obstruction also facilitates the accumulation of pleural fluid.
- Women’s Health Program
- MECHANISMS OF ARRHYTHMOGENESIS
- Nephritic Glomerulopathies
- ASTHMA
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- SPECIFIC ENTITIES - DISEASES WITH KFiOWIi ETIOLOGIES -
- CLINICAL APPROACH TO LIVER DISEASE
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- DEFINITION
- ATHEROSCLEROSIS
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- GENERAL SURGERY IN THE PATIENT WITH HEART DISEASE
- MEDIASTINITIS
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