Sökning: "Capillary permeability"
Visar resultat 21 - 25 av 45 avhandlingar innehållade orden Capillary permeability.
21. Nephrotic syndrome causes selective damage to the glomerular charge or size barriers. Physiological mechanisms based onexperimental studies in the rat
Sammanfattning : Nephrotic syndrome causes selective damage to the glomerular charge or size barriers. Physiological mechanisms based on experimental studies in the rat. Department of Physiology, Institute for Physiology and Pharmacology, Göteborg University, Box 432, SE-405 30 Gothenburg, Sweden. LÄS MER
22. The role of the endothelin system in experimental acute lung injury : with special reference to the formation of extra-vascular lung water
Sammanfattning : Acute lung injury is a major clinical challenge in the intensive care unit. Sepsis is the most frequent underlying cause of this pulmonary syndrome, which contains inflammation-induced diffuse alveolar damage and early stage high permeability edema. LÄS MER
23. Vascular effects of prostacyclin in cat skeletal muscle and in the traumatised rat brain
Sammanfattning : Disturbances in microvascular function may be important for tissue damage in many disease states. Prostacyclin, a substance produced by endothelial cells, is important for the maintenance of normal vascular homeostasis and is a potential drug for treatment of microvascular dysfunction, but indications and optimal dosage remains to be established. LÄS MER
24. Analysis of Transvascular Transport Phenomena in the glomerular and peritoneal microcirculation
Sammanfattning : The current work is devoted entirely to the study of passive transport phenomena, or more specifically, the more simple diffusion, electric migration and filtration of solute matter and water over glomerular and peritoneal capillary walls. The driving forces behind such trans-capillary transport phenomena have long been assumed to be simple gradients of concentration, hydrostatic pressure and electric potential. LÄS MER
25. On Brain Oedema
Sammanfattning : Traumatic brain injury and bacterial meningitis may at a glance appear as two different disease entities. The host reaction, however, to both trauma and infection involves a strong inflammatory response, with the classical symptomology of rubor, tumor, calor, dolor et functio laesa. LÄS MER