RESUMPTION OF FUNCTION OF AUTOPLASTIC ADRENOCORTICAL TRANSPLANTS TO THE DORSAL MUSCULATURE IN RATS
- 1 February 1950
- journal article
- research article
- Published by The Endocrine Society in Endocrinology
- Vol. 46 (2) , 228-232
- https://doi.org/10.1210/endo-46-2-228
Abstract
Seven days after operation, adrenalectomized rats with autoplastic adrenocortical transplants to the dorsal musculature recover from doses of histamine which would kill adrenalectomized rats (10 or 15 mg./100 g. body wt.). Rats with transplants, 7 days after operation, survive a 4-hr. exposure to cold (2[degree]C) which would kill adrenalectomized rats, and by 10 days after operation they maintain normal colonic temps. Rats with transplants exhibit some resistance to water intoxication by 10 days after operation, and the maximum of which they are capable by about the 30th post-operative day, but they never recover a normal resistance to this stress.This publication has 5 references indexed in Scilit:
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- REDISTRIBUTION OF BODY FLUIDS AFTER GLUCOSE INJECTIONS IN RATS WITH ADRENOCORTICAL TRANSPLANTS1,Endocrinology, 1942
- Effect of adrenal cortical transplants on life-maintenance and ?water intoxication?The Anatomical Record, 1940
- AUTOTRANSPLANTATION AND REGENERATION OF THE ADRENAL GLANDEndocrinology, 1938
- THE FUNCTIONAL EFFICIENCY OF TRANSPLANTED ADRENAL CORTICAL TISSUEEndocrinology, 1937