1937
DOI: 10.3181/00379727-35-9089p
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Effect of Diphtheria Toxin Upon Vitamin G in Adrenals of Guinea Pigs

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Cited by 5 publications
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“…It is dif6cult, of course, to exclude with certainty that this secondary increase may not be the result of better adjustment to laboratory conditions. However, the data recently published by Torrance (10), who observed a marked increase in C content of the suprarenal in guinea pigs following administration of sublethal doses of diphtheria toxin, suggest at least the possibility that recovery from poliomyelitis may be accompanied with a mobilization of vitamin C. Of particular interest is the fact that unusually high C levels were uniformly encountered in monkeys which had escaped paralysis following treatment with vitamin C, when such animals were examined in the early stages of their survival. Since these values were even higher than those obtained in normal animals after C preparation, they probably represent the aggregate effect of increased intake and increased assimilation of vitamin C during the infection.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 96%
“…It is dif6cult, of course, to exclude with certainty that this secondary increase may not be the result of better adjustment to laboratory conditions. However, the data recently published by Torrance (10), who observed a marked increase in C content of the suprarenal in guinea pigs following administration of sublethal doses of diphtheria toxin, suggest at least the possibility that recovery from poliomyelitis may be accompanied with a mobilization of vitamin C. Of particular interest is the fact that unusually high C levels were uniformly encountered in monkeys which had escaped paralysis following treatment with vitamin C, when such animals were examined in the early stages of their survival. Since these values were even higher than those obtained in normal animals after C preparation, they probably represent the aggregate effect of increased intake and increased assimilation of vitamin C during the infection.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 96%
“…The injection of sublethal doses of diphtheria toxin in guinea pigs causes a depletion of vitamin C from the suprarenals, pan-creas, and kidneys (Lyman and King, 1936;Torrance, 1937a;Haas, 1937b). Lyman and King observed an increase or a decrease of vitamin C in the liver, depending upon the dose of toxin and the amount of vitamin given daily.…”
Section: Downloaded Frommentioning
confidence: 99%