Studies have been made of marrow restoration after localized depletion of the rabbit femur by dextran perfusion. Restoration was shown to involve an initial period of reorganization which blends with a more prolonged period of hemic cell repopulation. Cellularity returned to normal levels by 35 days, the recovery of myeloid cells being somewhat more rapid than that of the erythroid elements. In either case, the evolution of immature hemic cells was soon followed by the appearance of more mature forms even at the earliest stages of marrow repopulation. 3H‐TdR uptake per cell increased rapidly to a level approximately twice normal after the first week. The augmented incorporation of thymidine, revealed by scintillation spectrometry and confirmed upon autoradiography, was shown to be due to an increase in DNA synthesis rate as well as in the fraction of participating cells. It is suggested that the enhanced cell production is brought about by a decrease in the proliferative cell cycle and an increase in the growth fraction. The origin of the repopulating cells remains a moot point. Cell migration from the epiphyseal marrow is apparently not involved. Irrespective of the source of stem‐type cells, the stimulus for regeneration appears to be locally determined.
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