1993
DOI: 10.1080/15287399309531696
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Acute‐phase plasma protein response to cholera intoxication in healthy and diabetic rats

Abstract: The aim of the present study is twofold: to establish the response of hepatic machinery of plasma protein biosynthesis to cholera intoxication, and to examine the same response of alloxan-diabetic hepatocytes with minimal capacity of synthesis of plasma proteins. Direct lesion of hepatic plasma membranes via ip administration of cholera toxin to male rats resulted in a typical acute-phase response (APR) of plasma proteins, which had regressed to levels similar to those of healthy controls approximately at 240 … Show more

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Cited by 6 publications
(2 citation statements)
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“…Values of an unidentified peak "X" and transferrin varied widely and there w ere continual decreases in C3c + C3, albumin, -1-acid glycoprotein, macroglobulin, and -1-lipoprotein ( Figure 2). Paradoxically, the relative concentration of -1-acid glycoprotein, w hich increased up to sixfold during the course of a typical inflammation after sc administration of carrage enan (Scherer et al, 1977), ip administration of cholera toxin (Fouad et al, 1993), partial hepatectomy (Fouad et al, 1992), or tumor transplantation (Abd-el-Fattah et al, 1981), continued to decreas e until the end of the chemically induced cirrhosis experiment. In general , these APR changes are associated with a gradual decrease in viable hepatocytes with the progres sion of cirrhosis.…”
Section: Liver Cirrhosismentioning
confidence: 95%
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“…Values of an unidentified peak "X" and transferrin varied widely and there w ere continual decreases in C3c + C3, albumin, -1-acid glycoprotein, macroglobulin, and -1-lipoprotein ( Figure 2). Paradoxically, the relative concentration of -1-acid glycoprotein, w hich increased up to sixfold during the course of a typical inflammation after sc administration of carrage enan (Scherer et al, 1977), ip administration of cholera toxin (Fouad et al, 1993), partial hepatectomy (Fouad et al, 1992), or tumor transplantation (Abd-el-Fattah et al, 1981), continued to decreas e until the end of the chemically induced cirrhosis experiment. In general , these APR changes are associated with a gradual decrease in viable hepatocytes with the progres sion of cirrhosis.…”
Section: Liver Cirrhosismentioning
confidence: 95%
“…Kinins are responsible for symptoms of inflammation ranging from vasodilatation and redness to an increase in vascular permeability associated with exudation and swelling (M ovat, 197 9). A similar m echanism w as p ropo sed to accou nt for the release of plasma proteins into the peritoneal fluid of cholera-intoxicated rats (Fouad et al, 1993). Further, physical injury precipitated by life-threatening surgical manipulation, such as in-parallel implantation of a donor rat liver into a recipient rat, induced exudation of peritoneal fluid containing quantitatively the spectrum of rat serum proteins (F. M. Fouad, O.…”
Section: Liver Cirrhosismentioning
confidence: 98%