1 The effects of aspirin, prednisolone, and indomethacin on nephrotoxic serum nephritis in rats was studied. The nephritis was induced by a single intravenous injection of nephrotoxic serum (NTS, rabbit anti-serum against the water-soluble renal antigen of the rat). The injection of NTS induced the heterologous phase of proteinuria (within a day after NTS injection) and then the autologous phase (5 to 7 days after NTS injection). The effect of drugs given before the NTS (i.e. prophylactically) or after the NTS (i.e. therapeutically) was investigated. 2 Aspirin, which was given orally at doses of 150 and 250 mg/kg daily from the day before NTS injection, suppressed the. development of proteinuria in both the heterologous and_ the autologous phase, and lowered the serum cholesterol level towards the normal level. Aspirin (250 mg/kg daily, orally) had no significant effect against the established proteinuria in the autologous phase. 3 Prednisolone, which was given orally at doses of 3 and 5 mg/kg daily from the day before NTS injection, elevated the proteinuria in the heterologous phase, while inhibiting the development of proteinuria in the autologous phase. Prednisolone (5 mg/kg daily, orally) was ineffective against established proteinuria in the autologous phase. 4 Indomethacin (3 mg/kg daily, orally) did not exert any significant effect on proteinuria in either the heterologous or the autologous phase.
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