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A long-distance fluid transport pathway within fibrous connective tissues in patients with ankle edema

Hongyi Li, Chongqing Yang, Kuiyuan Lu, Liyang Zhang, Jiefu Yang, Fang Wang, Dongge Liu, Di Cui, Mingjun Sun, Jianxin Pang, Luru Dai, Dong Han, Fulong Liao
Key takeaways
  1. 01Investigated fluid drainage pathways in ankle edema
  2. 02Identified long fluid channels within fibrous connective tissue
  3. 03Pathways were found in skin layers and around blood vessels
  4. 04Suggests a role for connective tissue in interstitial fluid transport

A network of fibrous connective tissue may form long-distance channels that help drain excess fluid from areas of swelling like the ankle.

Abstract

Objectives: Although the microcirculatory dysfunctions of edema formation are well documented, the draining pattern of dermal edema lacks information. This study was to assess the potential drainage pathways of the interstitial fluid in patients with ankle edema using the anatomical and histological methods.

Methods and results: Four amputees of lower leg participated in this study. Fluorescent imaging agent was injected into lateral ankle dermis in one volunteered patient before the amputation and three lower legs after the amputation. Physiologically in the volunteer or enhanced by cyclical compression on three amputated limbs, several fluorescent longitudinal pathways from ankle dermis to the broken end of the amputated legs were subsequently visualized and studied using histological methods, laser confocal microscopy and electron microscopy methods respectively. Interestingly, the fluorescent pathways confirmed to be fibrous connective tissues and the presence of two types: those of the cutaneous pathway (located in dermis or the interlobular septum among adipose tissues within the hypodermis) and those of the perivascular pathway (located in connective tissues surrounding the veins and the arteries). The intrinsic three-dimensional architecture of each fluorescent pathway was the longitudinally running and interconnected fibril bundles, upon which, an interfacial transport pathway within connective tissues was visualized by fluorescein.

Conclusions: The current anatomical data suggested that a unique long-distance transport pathway composed of oriented fibrous connective tissues might play a pathophysiological role in draining dermal edema besides vascular circulations and provide novel understandings of general fibrous connective tissues in life science.

Cite this study
APA
Hongyi Li, Chongqing Yang, Kuiyuan Lu, Liyang Zhang, Jiefu Yang, Fang Wang, Dongge Liu, Di Cui, Mingjun Sun, Jianxin Pang, Luru Dai, Dong Han, & Fulong Liao (2016). A long-distance fluid transport pathway within fibrous connective tissues in patients with ankle edema. https://fasciaresearchdatabase.com/a-long-distance-fluid-transport-pathway-within-fibrous-connective-tissues-in-patients-with-ankle-edema/
MLA
Hongyi Li, et al. "A long-distance fluid transport pathway within fibrous connective tissues in patients with ankle edema." 2016, https://fasciaresearchdatabase.com/a-long-distance-fluid-transport-pathway-within-fibrous-connective-tissues-in-patients-with-ankle-edema/.
Chicago
Hongyi Li et al. 2016. "A long-distance fluid transport pathway within fibrous connective tissues in patients with ankle edema.". https://fasciaresearchdatabase.com/a-long-distance-fluid-transport-pathway-within-fibrous-connective-tissues-in-patients-with-ankle-edema/