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Underfilling,
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Overflow
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Peripheral arterial vasodilation.
The underfilling theory- primary abnormality is inappropriate sequestration of fluid within
the splanchnic vascular bed due to portal hypertension and a consequent
decrease in effective circulating blood volume. This activates the plasma
renin, aldosterone, and sympathetic nervous system, resulting in renal sodium and water retention.
The overflow theory suggests that the primary abnormality is inappropriate renal retention of sodium and water in
the absence of volume depletion. This theory was developed in accordance
with the observation that patients with cirrhosis have intravascular
hypervolemia rather than hypovolemia.
The most recent theory, the peripheral
arterial vasodilation hypothesis, includes components of both of the
other theories. It suggests that portal hypertension leads to vasodilation,
which causes decreased effective arterial blood volume. As the natural history
of the disease progresses, neurohumoral excitation increases, more renal sodium
is retained, and plasma volume expands. This leads to an overflow of fluid into
the peritoneal cavity. The vasodilation theory proposes that underfilling is operative early and overflow is
operative late in the natural history of cirrhosis.
Although the sequence of events that occurs between the
development of portal hypertension and renal sodium retention is not entirely
clear, portal hypertension apparently leads to an increase in nitric oxide levels. Nitric oxide mediates
splanchnic and peripheral vasodilation. Hepatic artery nitric oxide synthase
activity is greater in patients with ascites than in those without ascites.
Regardless of the initiating event, many factors
contribute to the accumulation of fluid in the abdominal cavity. Elevated
levels of epinephrine and norepinephrine are well-documented factors.
Hypoalbuminemia and reduced plasma oncotic pressure favor the extravasation of
fluid from the plasma to the peritoneal fluid, and, thus, ascites is infrequent
in patients with cirrhosis unless both portal hypertension and hypoalbuminemia
are present.
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