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PATHOGENESIS OF EXPERIMENTAL SHOCK : II. ABSENCE OF ENDOTOXIC ACTIVITY IN BLOOD OF RABBITS SUBJECTED TO GRADED HEMORRHAGE

A series of biological test reactions was used in order to establish the presence of bacterial endotoxins in the blood of rabbits during the progression of hemorrhagic shock. 1. When the shocked animal was used as the test object, it was not possible to induce either the generalized Shwartzman react...

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Autores principales: Nagler, Arnold L., Zweifach, Benjamin W.
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: The Rockefeller University Press 1961
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2137455/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/13727454
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author Nagler, Arnold L.
Zweifach, Benjamin W.
author_facet Nagler, Arnold L.
Zweifach, Benjamin W.
author_sort Nagler, Arnold L.
collection PubMed
description A series of biological test reactions was used in order to establish the presence of bacterial endotoxins in the blood of rabbits during the progression of hemorrhagic shock. 1. When the shocked animal was used as the test object, it was not possible to induce either the generalized Shwartzman reaction or the dermal Shwartzman phenomenon with exogenous endotoxin (S. enteritidis or E. coli) as one of the two provocative factors. 2. Epinephrine instilled into the skin of rabbits either before, during, or after an episode of hemorrhagic shock did not result in the hemorrhagic skin reaction which occurs in the presence of as little as 1 µg of endotoxin intravenously. 3. Passive transfer from a donor in the irreversible phase of shock of 20 to 25 ml of blood into a primed recipient (B.P. at 40 mm Hg for 1 hour) was uniformly lethal. 4. Similar amounts of blood from such shocked donor failed upon intravenous injection to elicit a protective hemorrhagic reaction in skin sites which were infiltrated with 100 µg of epinephrine. In the same animals 1 µg of endotoxin added to the blood samples caused a positive dermal response. 5. Blood was taken from rabbits which had been pretreated with S. enteritidis endotoxin and then subjected to hemorrhagic shock (35 mm Hg for 2 hours). Such samples upon passive transfer produced positive skin reactions in epinephrine sites but were not lethal to the primed test recipient used in these studies. It is concluded that the contribution of bacterial endotoxemia to the genesis of hemorrhagic shock remains to be determined.
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spelling pubmed-21374552008-04-17 PATHOGENESIS OF EXPERIMENTAL SHOCK : II. ABSENCE OF ENDOTOXIC ACTIVITY IN BLOOD OF RABBITS SUBJECTED TO GRADED HEMORRHAGE Nagler, Arnold L. Zweifach, Benjamin W. J Exp Med Article A series of biological test reactions was used in order to establish the presence of bacterial endotoxins in the blood of rabbits during the progression of hemorrhagic shock. 1. When the shocked animal was used as the test object, it was not possible to induce either the generalized Shwartzman reaction or the dermal Shwartzman phenomenon with exogenous endotoxin (S. enteritidis or E. coli) as one of the two provocative factors. 2. Epinephrine instilled into the skin of rabbits either before, during, or after an episode of hemorrhagic shock did not result in the hemorrhagic skin reaction which occurs in the presence of as little as 1 µg of endotoxin intravenously. 3. Passive transfer from a donor in the irreversible phase of shock of 20 to 25 ml of blood into a primed recipient (B.P. at 40 mm Hg for 1 hour) was uniformly lethal. 4. Similar amounts of blood from such shocked donor failed upon intravenous injection to elicit a protective hemorrhagic reaction in skin sites which were infiltrated with 100 µg of epinephrine. In the same animals 1 µg of endotoxin added to the blood samples caused a positive dermal response. 5. Blood was taken from rabbits which had been pretreated with S. enteritidis endotoxin and then subjected to hemorrhagic shock (35 mm Hg for 2 hours). Such samples upon passive transfer produced positive skin reactions in epinephrine sites but were not lethal to the primed test recipient used in these studies. It is concluded that the contribution of bacterial endotoxemia to the genesis of hemorrhagic shock remains to be determined. The Rockefeller University Press 1961-08-01 /pmc/articles/PMC2137455/ /pubmed/13727454 Text en Copyright © Copyright, 1961, by The Rockefeller Institute This article is distributed under the terms of an Attribution–Noncommercial–Share Alike–No Mirror Sites license for the first six months after the publication date (see http://www.rupress.org/terms). After six months it is available under a Creative Commons License (Attribution–Noncommercial–Share Alike 4.0 Unported license, as described at http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Nagler, Arnold L.
Zweifach, Benjamin W.
PATHOGENESIS OF EXPERIMENTAL SHOCK : II. ABSENCE OF ENDOTOXIC ACTIVITY IN BLOOD OF RABBITS SUBJECTED TO GRADED HEMORRHAGE
title PATHOGENESIS OF EXPERIMENTAL SHOCK : II. ABSENCE OF ENDOTOXIC ACTIVITY IN BLOOD OF RABBITS SUBJECTED TO GRADED HEMORRHAGE
title_full PATHOGENESIS OF EXPERIMENTAL SHOCK : II. ABSENCE OF ENDOTOXIC ACTIVITY IN BLOOD OF RABBITS SUBJECTED TO GRADED HEMORRHAGE
title_fullStr PATHOGENESIS OF EXPERIMENTAL SHOCK : II. ABSENCE OF ENDOTOXIC ACTIVITY IN BLOOD OF RABBITS SUBJECTED TO GRADED HEMORRHAGE
title_full_unstemmed PATHOGENESIS OF EXPERIMENTAL SHOCK : II. ABSENCE OF ENDOTOXIC ACTIVITY IN BLOOD OF RABBITS SUBJECTED TO GRADED HEMORRHAGE
title_short PATHOGENESIS OF EXPERIMENTAL SHOCK : II. ABSENCE OF ENDOTOXIC ACTIVITY IN BLOOD OF RABBITS SUBJECTED TO GRADED HEMORRHAGE
title_sort pathogenesis of experimental shock : ii. absence of endotoxic activity in blood of rabbits subjected to graded hemorrhage
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2137455/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/13727454
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