BLOOD PLASMA PROTEIN REGENERATION CONTROLLED BY DIET
Open Access
- 1 March 1934
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Rockefeller University Press in The Journal of Experimental Medicine
- Vol. 59 (3) , 251-267
- https://doi.org/10.1084/jem.59.3.251
Abstract
When blood plasma proteins are depleted by bleeding and return of the washed red cells (plasmapheresis) the regeneration of new plasma proteins can be controlled at will by diet. The amount and character of protein intake is all important. Liver protein and casein are efficient proteins to promote rapid regeneration of plasma proteins but some vegetable proteins are also efficient. The blood plasma proteins are reduced by plasmapheresis close to the edema level (3.5–4.0 per cent) and kept at this level by suitable exchanges almost daily. The amount of plasma protein removed is credited to the given diet period. A basal ration is used which is poor in vegetable protein (potato) and contains no animal protein. The dog on this ration can be kept in nitrogen balance but can produce only about 2 gm. plasma protein per kilo body weight per week. With liver or casein feeding this production can be increased three- or fourfold. A reserve of protein building material can be demonstrated in the normal dog when its plasma proteins are depleted. In the first 3 weeks of depletion this reserve in excess of the final basal output may amount to 3–20 gm. protein. This may be stored at least in part in the liver. As much as 50 per cent of this reserve may be albumin or albumin producing material. A reversal of the albumin-globulin ratio may be observed on the basal diet alone. The reversal will always follow plasmapheresis with the dog on the basal diet and the total plasma protein output will consist approximately of 2 parts globulin and 1 part albumin. Liver diet will raise the production and output of albumin and bring the ratio back toward normal. Albumin production may actually exceed the globulin output during liver diet periods. The change is less conspicuous with casein but in the same direction.This publication has 8 references indexed in Scilit:
- THE EFFECT OF RESTRICTION OF PROTEIN INTAKE ON THE SERUM PROTEIN CONCENTRATION OF THE RATThe Journal of Experimental Medicine, 1933
- THE EFFECT OF SERUM TRANSFUSION ON THE PLASMA PROTEIN DEPLETION ASSOCIATED WITH NUTRITIONAL EDEMA IN DOGSJournal of Clinical Investigation, 1933
- THE RELATION BETWEEN PLASMA PROTEIN CONTENT, PLASMA SPECIFIC GRAVITY AND EDEMA IN DOGS MAINTAINED ON A PROTEIN INADEQUATE DIET AND IN DOGS RENDERED EDEMATOUS BY PLASMAPHERESISJournal of Clinical Investigation, 1933
- PLASMAPHERESIS EDEMA. I. THE RELATION OF REDUCTION OF SERUM PROTEINS TO EDEMA AND THE PATHOLOGICAL ANATOMY ACCOMPANYING PLASMAPHERESIS 1Journal of Clinical Investigation, 1932
- THE MAINTENANCE OF A NORMAL PLASMA PROTEIN CONCENTRATION IN SPITE OF REPEATED PROTEIN LOSS BY BLEEDINGThe Journal of Experimental Medicine, 1932
- THE BLOOD FIBRINOGEN LEVEL IN HEPATECTOMIZED DOGS AND AN OUTLINE OF A METHOD FOR THE QUANTITATIVE DETERMINATION OF FIBRINOGENAmerican Journal of Physiology-Legacy Content, 1930
- EXPERIMENTAL EDEMA (NEPHROSIS) IN DOGS IN RELATION TO EDEMA OF RENAL ORIGIN IN PATIENTSArchives of internal medicine (1960), 1930
- BLOOD REGENERATION IN SEVERE ANEMIAAmerican Journal of Physiology-Legacy Content, 1930