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Rete mirabile

A rete mirabile (Latin for "wonderful net"; pl.: retia mirabilia) is a complex of arteries and veins lying very close to each other, found in some vertebrates, mainly warm-blooded ones. The rete mirabile utilizes countercurrent blood flow within the net (blood flowing in opposite directions) to act as a countercurrent exchanger. It exchanges heat, ions, or gases between vessel walls so that the two bloodstreams within the rete maintain a gradient with respect to temperature, or concentration of gases or solutes. This term was coined by Galen.[1][2]

Rete mirabile
Rete mirabile of a sheep
Identifiers
TA98A12.0.00.013
TA23928
FMA76728
Anatomical terminology
[edit on Wikidata]

Effectiveness edit

The effectiveness of retia is primarily determined by how readily the heat, ions, or gases can be exchanged. For a given length, they are most effective with respect to gases or heat, then small ions, and decreasingly so with respect to other substances.[citation needed]

The retia can provide for extremely efficient exchanges. In bluefin tuna, for example, nearly all of the metabolic heat in the venous blood is transferred to the arterial blood, thus conserving muscle temperature; that heat exchange approaches 99% efficiency.[3][4]

Birds edit

In birds with webbed feet, retia mirabilia in the legs and feet transfer heat from the outgoing (hot) blood in the arteries to the incoming (cold) blood in the veins. The effect of this biological heat exchanger is that the internal temperature of the feet is much closer to the ambient temperature, thus reducing heat loss. Penguins also have them in the flippers and nasal passages.

Seabirds distill seawater using countercurrent exchange in a so-called salt gland with a rete mirabile. The gland secretes highly concentrated brine stored near the nostrils above the beak. The bird then "sneezes" the brine out. As freshwater is not usually available in their environments, some seabirds, such as pelicans, petrels, albatrosses, gulls and terns, possess this gland, which allows them to drink the salty water from their environments while they are hundreds of miles away from land.[5][6]

Fish edit

Fish have evolved retia mirabilia multiple times to raise the temperature[7] (endothermy) or the oxygen concentration of a body part above the ambient level.[8]

In many fish, a rete mirabile helps fill the swim bladder with oxygen, increasing the fish's buoyancy. The rete mirabile is an essential[8] part of the system that pumps dissolved oxygen from a low partial pressure ( ) of 0.2 atmospheres into a gas filled bladder that is at a pressure of hundreds of atmospheres.[9] A rete mirabile called the choroid rete mirabile is found in most living teleosts and raises the   of the retina.[8] The higher supply of oxygen allows the teleost retina to be thick and have few blood vessels thereby increasing its sensitivity to light.[10] In addition to raising the  , the choroid rete has evolved to raise the temperature of the eye in some teleosts and sharks.[7]

A countercurrent exchange system is utilized between the venous and arterial capillaries. Lowering the pH levels in the venous capillaries causes oxygen to unbind from blood hemoglobin because of the Root effect. This causes an increase in venous blood oxygen partial pressure, allowing the oxygen to diffuse through the capillary membrane and into the arterial capillaries, where oxygen is still sequestered to hemoglobin. The cycle of diffusion continues until the partial pressure of oxygen in the arterial capillaries exceeds that in the swim bladder. At this point, the dissolved oxygen in the arterial capillaries diffuses into the swim bladder via the gas gland.[11]

The rete mirabile allows for an increase in muscle temperature in regions where this network of vein and arteries is found. The fish is able to thermoregulate certain areas of its body. Additionally, this increase in temperature leads to an increase in basal metabolic temperature. The fish is now able to split ATP at a higher rate and ultimately can swim faster.

The opah utilizes retia mirabilia to conserve heat, making it the newest addition to the list of regionally endothermic fish. Blood traveling through capillaries in the gills must carry cold blood due to their exposure to cold water, but retia mirabilia in the opah's gills are able to transfer heat from warm blood in arterioles coming from the heart that heats this colder blood in arterioles leaving the gills. The huge pectoral muscles of the opah, which generate most of the body heat, are thus able to control the temperature of the rest of the body.[12]

Mammals edit

In mammals, an elegant rete mirabile in the efferent arterioles of juxtamedullary glomeruli is important in maintaining the hypertonicity of the renal medulla. It is the hypertonicity of this zone, resorbing water osmotically from the renal collecting ducts as they exit the kidney, that makes possible the excretion of a hypertonic urine and maximum conservation of body water.

Vascular retia mirabilia are also found in the limbs of a range of mammals. These reduce the temperature in the extremities. Some of these probably function to prevent heat loss in cold conditions by reducing the temperature gradient between the limb and the environment. Others reduce the temperature of the testes increasing their productivity. In the neck of the dog, a rete mirabile protects the brain when the body overheats during hunting; the venous blood is cooled down by panting before entering the net.

Retia mirabilia also occur frequently in mammals that burrow, dive or have arboreal lifestyles that involve clinging with the limbs for lengthy periods. In the last case, slow-moving arboreal mammals such as sloths, lorises and arboreal anteaters possess retia of the highly developed type known as vascular bundles. The structure and function of these mammalian retia mirabilia are reviewed by O'Dea (1990).[13]

The ancient physician Galen mistakenly thought that humans also have a rete mirabile in the neck, apparently based on dissection of sheep and misidentifying the results with the human carotid sinus, and ascribed important properties to it; it fell to Berengario da Carpi first, and then to Vesalius to demonstrate the error.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Grant, Mark (2000). Galen on Food and Diet. Routledge.
  2. ^ "Rete Mirabile". encyclopedia2.thefreedictionary.com. Retrieved 6 September 2012.
  3. ^ Cech, Joseph J.; Laurs, R. Michael; Graham, Jeffrey B. (March 1, 1984). "Temperature-Induced Changes in Blood Gas Equilibria in the Albacore, Thunnus alalunga, a Warm-Bodied Tuna". Journal of Experimental Biology. 109 (1): 21–34. doi:10.1242/jeb.109.1.21.
  4. ^ Taylor, Richard C. (30 April 1982). A Companion to Animal Physiology. CUP Archive. p. 228. ISBN 978-0-521-24437-4.
  5. ^ Proctor, Noble S.; Lynch, Patrick J. (1993). Manual of Ornithology. Yale University Press. ISBN 0300076193.
  6. ^ Ritchison, Gary. "Avian osmoregulation » Urinary System, Salt Glands, and Osmoregulation". Retrieved 16 April 2011. including images of the gland and its function
  7. ^ a b Runcie, Rosa M.; Dewar, Heidi; Hawn, Donald R.; Frank, Lawrence R.; Dickson, Kathryn A. (2009-02-15). "Evidence for cranial endothermy in the opah (Lampris guttatus)". Journal of Experimental Biology. 212 (4): 461–470. doi:10.1242/jeb.022814. eISSN 1477-9145. ISSN 0022-0949. PMC 2726851. PMID 19181893.
  8. ^ a b c Berenbrink, Michael (2007-05-01). "Historical reconstructions of evolving physiological complexity: O2 secretion in the eye and swimbladder of fishes". Journal of Experimental Biology. 210 (9): 1641–1652. doi:10.1242/jeb.003319. eISSN 1477-9145. ISSN 0022-0949. PMID 17449830. Retrieved 2021-02-18.
  9. ^ Pelster, Bernd (2001-12-01). "The Generation of Hyperbaric Oxygen Tensions in Fish". Physiology. 16 (6): 287–291. doi:10.1152/physiologyonline.2001.16.6.287. ISSN 1548-9213. PMID 11719607. Retrieved 2021-02-18.
  10. ^ Damsgaard, Christian (2021-02-01). "Physiology and evolution of oxygen secreting mechanism in the fisheye". Comparative Biochemistry and Physiology Part A: Molecular & Integrative Physiology. 252: 110840. doi:10.1016/j.cbpa.2020.110840. ISSN 1095-6433. PMID 33166685.
  11. ^ Kardong, K. (2008). Vertebrates: Comparative anatomy, function, evolution (5th ed.). Boston: McGraw-Hill.
  12. ^ Wegner, Nicholas C.; Snodgrass, Owyn E.; Dewar, Heidi; Hyde, John R. (15 May 2015). "Whole-body endothermy in a mesopelagic fish, the opah, Lampris guttatus". Science. 348 (6236): 786–789. Bibcode:2015Sci...348..786W. doi:10.1126/science.aaa8902. PMID 25977549. S2CID 17412022.
  13. ^ O'Dea, J. D (1990). "The mammalian Rete mirabile and oxygen availability". Comparative Biochemistry and Physiology A. 95A (1): 23–25. doi:10.1016/0300-9629(90)90004-C.

External links edit

  • Fish gas bladder with an adjacent rete mirabile

rete, mirabile, rete, mirabile, latin, wonderful, retia, mirabilia, complex, arteries, veins, lying, very, close, each, other, found, some, vertebrates, mainly, warm, blooded, ones, rete, mirabile, utilizes, countercurrent, blood, flow, within, blood, flowing,. A rete mirabile Latin for wonderful net pl retia mirabilia is a complex of arteries and veins lying very close to each other found in some vertebrates mainly warm blooded ones The rete mirabile utilizes countercurrent blood flow within the net blood flowing in opposite directions to act as a countercurrent exchanger It exchanges heat ions or gases between vessel walls so that the two bloodstreams within the rete maintain a gradient with respect to temperature or concentration of gases or solutes This term was coined by Galen 1 2 Rete mirabileRete mirabile of a sheepIdentifiersTA98A12 0 00 013TA23928FMA76728Anatomical terminology edit on Wikidata Contents 1 Effectiveness 2 Birds 3 Fish 4 Mammals 5 See also 6 References 7 External linksEffectiveness editThe effectiveness of retia is primarily determined by how readily the heat ions or gases can be exchanged For a given length they are most effective with respect to gases or heat then small ions and decreasingly so with respect to other substances citation needed The retia can provide for extremely efficient exchanges In bluefin tuna for example nearly all of the metabolic heat in the venous blood is transferred to the arterial blood thus conserving muscle temperature that heat exchange approaches 99 efficiency 3 4 Birds editIn birds with webbed feet retia mirabilia in the legs and feet transfer heat from the outgoing hot blood in the arteries to the incoming cold blood in the veins The effect of this biological heat exchanger is that the internal temperature of the feet is much closer to the ambient temperature thus reducing heat loss Penguins also have them in the flippers and nasal passages Seabirds distill seawater using countercurrent exchange in a so called salt gland with a rete mirabile The gland secretes highly concentrated brine stored near the nostrils above the beak The bird then sneezes the brine out As freshwater is not usually available in their environments some seabirds such as pelicans petrels albatrosses gulls and terns possess this gland which allows them to drink the salty water from their environments while they are hundreds of miles away from land 5 6 Fish editFish have evolved retia mirabilia multiple times to raise the temperature 7 endothermy or the oxygen concentration of a body part above the ambient level 8 In many fish a rete mirabile helps fill the swim bladder with oxygen increasing the fish s buoyancy The rete mirabile is an essential 8 part of the system that pumps dissolved oxygen from a low partial pressure P O 2 displaystyle P rm O 2 nbsp of 0 2 atmospheres into a gas filled bladder that is at a pressure of hundreds of atmospheres 9 A rete mirabile called the choroid rete mirabile is found in most living teleosts and raises the P O 2 displaystyle P rm O 2 nbsp of the retina 8 The higher supply of oxygen allows the teleost retina to be thick and have few blood vessels thereby increasing its sensitivity to light 10 In addition to raising the P O 2 displaystyle P rm O 2 nbsp the choroid rete has evolved to raise the temperature of the eye in some teleosts and sharks 7 A countercurrent exchange system is utilized between the venous and arterial capillaries Lowering the pH levels in the venous capillaries causes oxygen to unbind from blood hemoglobin because of the Root effect This causes an increase in venous blood oxygen partial pressure allowing the oxygen to diffuse through the capillary membrane and into the arterial capillaries where oxygen is still sequestered to hemoglobin The cycle of diffusion continues until the partial pressure of oxygen in the arterial capillaries exceeds that in the swim bladder At this point the dissolved oxygen in the arterial capillaries diffuses into the swim bladder via the gas gland 11 The rete mirabile allows for an increase in muscle temperature in regions where this network of vein and arteries is found The fish is able to thermoregulate certain areas of its body Additionally this increase in temperature leads to an increase in basal metabolic temperature The fish is now able to split ATP at a higher rate and ultimately can swim faster The opah utilizes retia mirabilia to conserve heat making it the newest addition to the list of regionally endothermic fish Blood traveling through capillaries in the gills must carry cold blood due to their exposure to cold water but retia mirabilia in the opah s gills are able to transfer heat from warm blood in arterioles coming from the heart that heats this colder blood in arterioles leaving the gills The huge pectoral muscles of the opah which generate most of the body heat are thus able to control the temperature of the rest of the body 12 Mammals editThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Rete mirabile news newspapers books scholar JSTOR February 2021 Learn how and when to remove this message In mammals an elegant rete mirabile in the efferent arterioles of juxtamedullary glomeruli is important in maintaining the hypertonicity of the renal medulla It is the hypertonicity of this zone resorbing water osmotically from the renal collecting ducts as they exit the kidney that makes possible the excretion of a hypertonic urine and maximum conservation of body water Vascular retia mirabilia are also found in the limbs of a range of mammals These reduce the temperature in the extremities Some of these probably function to prevent heat loss in cold conditions by reducing the temperature gradient between the limb and the environment Others reduce the temperature of the testes increasing their productivity In the neck of the dog a rete mirabile protects the brain when the body overheats during hunting the venous blood is cooled down by panting before entering the net Retia mirabilia also occur frequently in mammals that burrow dive or have arboreal lifestyles that involve clinging with the limbs for lengthy periods In the last case slow moving arboreal mammals such as sloths lorises and arboreal anteaters possess retia of the highly developed type known as vascular bundles The structure and function of these mammalian retia mirabilia are reviewed by O Dea 1990 13 The ancient physician Galen mistakenly thought that humans also have a rete mirabile in the neck apparently based on dissection of sheep and misidentifying the results with the human carotid sinus and ascribed important properties to it it fell to Berengario da Carpi first and then to Vesalius to demonstrate the error See also editPampiniform plexus a countercurrent heat exchanging structure in the spermatic cordReferences edit Grant Mark 2000 Galen on Food and Diet Routledge Rete Mirabile encyclopedia2 thefreedictionary com Retrieved 6 September 2012 Cech Joseph J Laurs R Michael Graham Jeffrey B March 1 1984 Temperature Induced Changes in Blood Gas Equilibria in the Albacore Thunnus alalunga a Warm Bodied Tuna Journal of Experimental Biology 109 1 21 34 doi 10 1242 jeb 109 1 21 Taylor Richard C 30 April 1982 A Companion to Animal Physiology CUP Archive p 228 ISBN 978 0 521 24437 4 Proctor Noble S Lynch Patrick J 1993 Manual of Ornithology Yale University Press ISBN 0300076193 Ritchison Gary Avian osmoregulation Urinary System Salt Glands and Osmoregulation Retrieved 16 April 2011 including images of the gland and its function a b Runcie Rosa M Dewar Heidi Hawn Donald R Frank Lawrence R Dickson Kathryn A 2009 02 15 Evidence for cranial endothermy in the opah Lampris guttatus Journal of Experimental Biology 212 4 461 470 doi 10 1242 jeb 022814 eISSN 1477 9145 ISSN 0022 0949 PMC 2726851 PMID 19181893 a b c Berenbrink Michael 2007 05 01 Historical reconstructions of evolving physiological complexity O2 secretion in the eye and swimbladder of fishes Journal of Experimental Biology 210 9 1641 1652 doi 10 1242 jeb 003319 eISSN 1477 9145 ISSN 0022 0949 PMID 17449830 Retrieved 2021 02 18 Pelster Bernd 2001 12 01 The Generation of Hyperbaric Oxygen Tensions in Fish Physiology 16 6 287 291 doi 10 1152 physiologyonline 2001 16 6 287 ISSN 1548 9213 PMID 11719607 Retrieved 2021 02 18 Damsgaard Christian 2021 02 01 Physiology and evolution of oxygen secreting mechanism in the fisheye Comparative Biochemistry and Physiology Part A Molecular amp Integrative Physiology 252 110840 doi 10 1016 j cbpa 2020 110840 ISSN 1095 6433 PMID 33166685 Kardong K 2008 Vertebrates Comparative anatomy function evolution 5th ed Boston McGraw Hill Wegner Nicholas C Snodgrass Owyn E Dewar Heidi Hyde John R 15 May 2015 Whole body endothermy in a mesopelagic fish the opah Lampris guttatus Science 348 6236 786 789 Bibcode 2015Sci 348 786W doi 10 1126 science aaa8902 PMID 25977549 S2CID 17412022 O Dea J D 1990 The mammalian Rete mirabile and oxygen availability Comparative Biochemistry and Physiology A 95A 1 23 25 doi 10 1016 0300 9629 90 90004 C External links editFish gas bladder with an adjacent rete mirabile Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Rete mirabile amp oldid 1221272913, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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