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Title: Ascites in liver diseases. Author: Gentilini P, Laffi G. Journal: Ann Ital Med Int; 1991; 6(1 Pt 2):148-55. PubMed ID: 1742150. Abstract: The clinical course of patients with cirrhosis of the liver is frequently complicated by progressive impairment of renal sodium handling leading to the formation of ascites. The occurrence of ascites is generally accompanied by the activation of several hormones and intrarenal autacoids and a complex derangement of systemic, portal and renal hemodynamics. The earliest "underfilling" theory of sodium retention proposes that ascites formation leads to hypovolemia and secondary sodium retention. According to the "overflow" theory, ascites formation is a secondary event with respect to sodium retention, which occurs as a primary phenomenon in the absence of hypovolemia. A third recently developed theory suggests that peripheral arteriolar vasodilation is the primary event of intravascular underfilling. The major documented site involved in arteriolar vasodilation is the splanchnic circulation. Occurrence of underfilling is not related to a reduction of plasma volume but to the enlargement of the vascular compartment. Vascular underfilling triggers a series of hemodynamic and hormonal compensatory events such as an increase in cardiac output and plasma volume, activation of the renin-angiotensin-aldosterone and sympathetic nervous system and non-osmotic hypersecretion of antidiuretic hormone and sodium retention, all of which aim at refilling the vascular compartment. In patients with compensated cirrhosis, i.e. without ascites, compensatory events maintain blood volume despite vascular underfilling, and so these patients do not develop ascites. In patients with decompensated cirrhosis, vascular underfilling due to arterial vasodilation, together with a reduced oncotic pressure and a severe degree of portal hypertension, favours the development of ascites. Underfilling of the arterial circulation is at its maximum in functional renal failure and the hepatorenal syndrome.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]