Interstitial Fluid Volume (ISF Volume)
Definition:
'Interstitial Fluid Volume
' refers to the total volume of fluid occupying the 'extracellular space
' between cells within a tissue. In the central nervous system (CNS), it is the fluid that lies between neurons, glia, and capillaries—distinct from cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) and intracellular fluid.
Physiological Role:
- Serves as a medium for:
- Nutrient transport
- Waste removal
- Ion exchange
- Intercellular signaling
- Provides mechanical support and maintains the extracellular matrix (ECM) environment.
- Interfaces dynamically with CSF through the glymphatic system and perivascular pathways.
Brain-Specific Characteristics:
- Estimated to occupy ~15–20% of total brain tissue volume under physiological conditions.
- Closely regulated by:
- Capillary filtration through the blood–brain barrier (BBB)
- Aquaporin-4 channels on astrocytic endfeet
- Arterial pulsatility and sleep-wake cycles (via glymphatic function)
Alterations in ISF Volume: ↑ ISF Volume:
- Aging-related extracellular matrix degradation
↓ ISF Volume:
- Cytotoxic edema (e.g., ischemic stroke)
- Cellular swelling or inflammation
Measurement Techniques:
- Spectral diffusion analysis (→ Fint)
- Diffusion MRI (indirect estimation via ADC)
- Tracer-based imaging in experimental models
- Optical or microdialysis methods in animal studies
Distinction from Related Terms:
- Interstitial fluid volume fraction (Fint):
Dimensionless ratio of ISF volume to total tissue volume.
- CSF volume: Located in ventricles and subarachnoid space; not part of ISF.
- Extracellular volume: Includes ISF + CSF + intravascular space (context-dependent).
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