Clinical and experimental evidence indicates that obstructive jaundice inhibits the healing of wounds. Experiments in the rat designed to investigate the migration of reticulo‐endothelial and fibroblasts into experimental granulomata are described. Standard preparations of obstructive jaundice and controls were devised using Wistar rats. The effects of bile‐duct obstruction and sham ligation are described. In another group of animals which was similarly prepared granuloma‐pouch experiments were carried out by burying sterile cotton‐wool pledgets of a known weight. These peledgets were removed from the jaundiced and control animals on the third, fifth, seventh, and ninth days after implantation, dried to remove the fluid component of the inflammatory process, and weighed on a microbalance. The weights were compared and it was found that a significant inhibition of weight increase occurred in the jaundiced animals during the first week, suggesting a delay in the migratory activity of reticuloendothelial cells and fibroblasts.
SUMMARYUsing biosynthetic activities which have a maximum energy requirement, the effect of obstruction of the bile-duct has been studied in isolated perfused rat livers, and compared with controls undergoing 'sham' ligation and with normal animals. T h e maximum rate of gluconeogenesis from lactate was inhibited by 67 per cent after bile-duct ligation when compared with the normal value. The maximum rate of urea synthesis which occurred in the presence of ornithine was the same in the jaundiced and in the normal animals. ' Sham' operation, without ligation of the bile-duct, inhibited gluconeogenesis by less than 20 per cent but doubled the maximum rate of urea synthesis.It is concluded that complete biliary obstruction seriously impairs gluconeogenesis and prevents the normal increase of urea synthesis which occurs in response to trauma and that these changes develop earlier than might be expected after the onset of obstruction.Some possible mechanisms of these effects are discussed. If similar abnormalities of hepatocyte function are demonstrated in man it is suggested that surgical relief of obstructive jaundice is indicated at an early stage.THE chemical changes observed in the blood of a patient or animal after the bile-duct becomes obstructed are due to retention of bile rather than to a direct effect of the obstruction on the cells of the liver. Abnormalities of clinical liver-function tests are not marked unless the obstructive jaundice has been present for some time, and it is usually considered that hepatocyte function remains normal during the first few weeks after obstruction has taken place. However, most biochemical activities of the liver take place at such a rate that the standard clinical tests of function, which are relatively insensitive, remain normal until gross hepatic damage has occurred.Recently, perfusion techniques have been developed which allow a direct study of the biosynthetic reactions of the liver. The maximum rates of energyrequiring cellular activities are more sensitive tests of liver function than are the investigations usually employed. The synthesis of glucose from lactate (Meyerhof, 1930;Hems, Ross, Berry, and Krebs, 1966), of urea from ammonia (Cohen and Sallach, 1961), and possibly of protein, are the principal reactions which consume large quantities of ATP, and require the integrated action of both mitochondrial and cytoplasmic enzymes.I n the experiments recorded in this paper ligation of the bile-duct has been used to produce jaundice, and the maximum rates of gluconeogenesis and urea synthesis in the perfused livers of jaundiced animals were compared with those in both normal and control animals. A preliminary account of part of this work has been presented previously (Lee, ROSS, and Haines, 1971). MATERIALS AND METHODSMale albino Wistar rats weighing between 150 and 200g. were obtained from Messrs. Scientific Products Farm, Ash, Kent, and were fed on a standard 41B diet.Bile-duct Ligation.-Three groups of rats were prepared for liver perfusion. Group I consisted of t...
A study of 75 patients who were admitted to the Oxjord
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.
customersupport@researchsolutions.com
10624 S. Eastern Ave., Ste. A-614
Henderson, NV 89052, USA
This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.
Copyright © 2025 scite LLC. All rights reserved.
Made with 💙 for researchers
Part of the Research Solutions Family.