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Lubrication regimes in mesothelial sliding
Authors:Loring Stephen H  Brown Richard E  Gouldstone Andrew  Butler James P
Institution:

aDepartment of Anesthesia and Critical Care, Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center and Harvard Medical School, DA 717, 330 Brookline Avenue, Boston, MA 02215-5491, USA

bPhysiology Program, Harvard School of Public Health, Boston, MA, USA

Abstract:To function normally, the lungs, heart, and other organs must undergo changes in shape and size, sliding against surrounding body walls. It is not known whether the delicate mesothelial surfaces covering these organs and body wall are in contact during sliding, or if hydrodynamic pressure in the lubricating liquid increases separation between their surfaces. To address this question, we measured the coefficient of friction (mu) of the mesothelial surface of nine rat-abdominal walls sliding in saline on a smooth glass surface. Sliding at physiological velocities of 0.0123-6.14 cm/s with normal stresses of 50-200 Pa, mu varied with velocity (P<0.001). On average, mu was relatively high at low speeds (0.078 at 0.041 cm/s), decreased to a minimum at intermediate speeds (0.034 at 1.23 cm/s), and increased slightly again at higher speeds (0.045 at 6.14 cm/s), consistent with a mixed lubrication regime in which there is at least partial hydrodynamic separation of surfaces. We conclude that mesothelial surfaces, sliding under physiological conditions, are protected from excessive shear by hydrodynamic pressures that increase separation of surfaces.
Keywords:Pleural  Tribology  Stribeck curve  Peritoneum  Elastohydrodynamic lubrication
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