Electrophoretic Analysis of Serum Proteins in Infants and Children

Abstract
THE recent development of electrophoretic technics for large-scale separation of the major components of the serum proteins and the realization that clinically recognizable disease may be produced by the relative or almost complete absence of one of the serum protein components (gamma globulin) have stimulated new interest in the alterations of the serum proteins in natural and pathologic states.Although changes in the albumin and alpha-globulin fractions of the serum proteins have been described as occurring in the acute phase of many diseases, previous authors1 , 2 have emphasized the fact that the serum level of gamma globulin is increased in the . . .

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