“…'Parallel' secretion of pancreatic enzymes was also reported in response to injections of secretin (Burton, Evans, Harper, Howat, Oleesky, Scott, and Varley, 1960) and of pancreozymin (Burton et al, 1960;Creutzfeldt, 1964;Rick, 1965;Sarles, Figarella, Prezelin, and Souville, 1966;Ammann, Tagwercher, Kashiwagi, and Rosenmund, 1968). On the other hand, Guth, Komarov, Shay, and Style (1956) found statistically significant day-to-day deviations from 'parallelism' in the enzyme response to food in dogs, while Worning and Mullertz (1966) (Burton et al, 1960) Gibbs (1950) showed that the secretion of amylase was sometimes grossly defective in normal infants, whose secretion of trypsin was normal, while Choi, Goldstein, Wirts, and Menduke (1967) recommended the measurement of trypsin because trypsin secretion could be abnormal when amylase secretion remained normal in patients with pancreatic disease. In a much earlier study, Diamond, Siegel, Gall, and Karlen (1939) had already suggested that the practice of estimating only one enzyme was not an adequate measure of total pancreatic capacity to secrete enzymes, because they found frequent dissociation between trypsin and amylase secretion.…”