Two days after a severe haemorrhage plasma calcium concentrations and bone marrow mitotic activity in rats were significantly increased and so remained for a further 5-6 days until the haematocrit had returned to normal. The first 48 h after bleeding were characterized by hypocalcaemia. During this phase two significant peaks in mitotic activity were observed at 4 and 18 h after haemorrhage. The mitotic surge 4 h after bleeding was still present in adrenalectomized and parathyroidectomized animals but in rats which were either hypophysectomized or had congenital diabetes insipidus this mitotic response was absent. Vasopressin was shown to stimulate bone marrow mitotic activity both in vivo and in vitro whereas angiotensin, aldosterone and erythropoietin had no rapid, direct mitogenic action on these cells. This novel hypophysial-bone marrow system suggests that vasopressin may assist in post-haemorrhagic recovery in blood cell numbers in the circulation.
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