PROTEOSE INTOXICATIONS AND INJURY OF BODY PROTEIN
Open Access
- 1 August 1918
- journal article
- Published by Rockefeller University Press in The Journal of Experimental Medicine
- Vol. 28 (2) , 243-252
- https://doi.org/10.1084/jem.28.2.243
Abstract
Sterile abscess formation in the dog is accompanied by a large increase in output of urinary nitrogen and also by a small but definite increase in the blood non-protein nitrogen. All this nitrogenous material of course is derived from body protein injury and autolysis. Septic inflammation in the dog (pleurisy, pneumonia, peritonitis, etc.) likewise shows a distinct rise in the blood non-protein nitrogen. This rise is not often so great as that frequently observed in the intoxication of intestinal obstruction. Many acute infections in man (septicemia, peritonitis, pneumonia, etc.) show a definite rise in the non-protein nitrogen and urea nitrogen of the blood; some cases show a very great rise above normal (over 100 mg. of non-protein nitrogen per 100 cc. of blood). There may be no anatomical change in the kidney beyond the familiar picture of cloudy swelling. This does not exclude the possibility of some transient functional derangement of the kidney epithelium. Certain obscure intoxications in man may show a considerable rise in the non-protein nitrogen of the blood, indicating a large amount of protein disintegration. These findings must be taken into account in any clinical analysis and interpretation of high non-protein nitrogen of the blood in pathological conditions.Keywords
This publication has 4 references indexed in Scilit:
- PROTEOSE INTOXICATIONS AND INJURY OF BODY PROTEINThe Journal of Experimental Medicine, 1918
- PROTEOSE INTOXICATIONS AND INJURY OF BODY PROTEINThe Journal of Experimental Medicine, 1917
- PROTEOSE INTOXICATIONS AND INJURY OF BODY PROTEINThe Journal of Experimental Medicine, 1917
- INTESTINAL OBSTRUCTIONThe Journal of Experimental Medicine, 1916