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THE ROLE OF THE MICROBIAL FLORA IN UREMIA : II. UREMIC COLITIS, CARDIOVASCULAR LESIONS, AND BIOCHEMICAL OBSERVATIONS

Uremic colitis of varying severity occurred in the majority of conventionalized rats dying after removal of both kidneys, but was not found in uremic conventionalized and germfree rats sacrificed preterminally, or in germfree and limited-flora rats dying from uremia, or in any of the controls. The l...

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Autores principales: Carter, Darryl, Einheber, Albert, Bauer, Heinz, Rosen, Hyman, Burns, Willard F.
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: The Rockefeller University Press 1966
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2138133/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/5905241
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author Carter, Darryl
Einheber, Albert
Bauer, Heinz
Rosen, Hyman
Burns, Willard F.
author_facet Carter, Darryl
Einheber, Albert
Bauer, Heinz
Rosen, Hyman
Burns, Willard F.
author_sort Carter, Darryl
collection PubMed
description Uremic colitis of varying severity occurred in the majority of conventionalized rats dying after removal of both kidneys, but was not found in uremic conventionalized and germfree rats sacrificed preterminally, or in germfree and limited-flora rats dying from uremia, or in any of the controls. The lesions were restricted to the cecum and their incidence and severity paralleled a shorter duration of survival. Cardiovascular damage including focal myocardial necrosis and calcification and patchy aortic and coronary calcification were observed in uremic rats regardless of their microbial status. These lesions had a higher incidence, developed more rapidly, and were more severe in the germfree and limited-flora rats than in the conventionalized animals. The presence or severity of the lesions, however, did not correlate with survival time of rats dying from uremia or with total plasma calcium and inorganic phosphorus levels of individual animals. Generalized necrotizing arteritis was not observed. Wound healing was poor in all uremic rats regardless of microbial status. Focal infection was noted in a few conventionalized rats dying from uremia, did not correlate with survival time, and was absent in all other groups. Comparison of biochemical findings between uremic germfree and conventionalized rats show a higher blood urea nitrogen and elevated plasma indoxyl sulfate in the presence of a microbial flora and a greater amount of plasma inorganic phosphorus in its absence. Uremia resulted in a decrease in hematocrit and increase in plasma and muscle potassium that were similar for germfree and conventionalized rats. Plasma and muscle sodium, total plasma calcium, glucose, and total protein were essentially unchanged by microbial status or uremia. Because the foregoing differences in the metabolic and histopathologic changes of uremia are linked to the known difference in microbial status of the fasting bilaterally-nephrectomized rats that were studied, they are a tangible indication of ways by which the indigenous microbial flora and its composition may affect the course of acute uremia.
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spelling pubmed-21381332008-04-17 THE ROLE OF THE MICROBIAL FLORA IN UREMIA : II. UREMIC COLITIS, CARDIOVASCULAR LESIONS, AND BIOCHEMICAL OBSERVATIONS Carter, Darryl Einheber, Albert Bauer, Heinz Rosen, Hyman Burns, Willard F. J Exp Med Article Uremic colitis of varying severity occurred in the majority of conventionalized rats dying after removal of both kidneys, but was not found in uremic conventionalized and germfree rats sacrificed preterminally, or in germfree and limited-flora rats dying from uremia, or in any of the controls. The lesions were restricted to the cecum and their incidence and severity paralleled a shorter duration of survival. Cardiovascular damage including focal myocardial necrosis and calcification and patchy aortic and coronary calcification were observed in uremic rats regardless of their microbial status. These lesions had a higher incidence, developed more rapidly, and were more severe in the germfree and limited-flora rats than in the conventionalized animals. The presence or severity of the lesions, however, did not correlate with survival time of rats dying from uremia or with total plasma calcium and inorganic phosphorus levels of individual animals. Generalized necrotizing arteritis was not observed. Wound healing was poor in all uremic rats regardless of microbial status. Focal infection was noted in a few conventionalized rats dying from uremia, did not correlate with survival time, and was absent in all other groups. Comparison of biochemical findings between uremic germfree and conventionalized rats show a higher blood urea nitrogen and elevated plasma indoxyl sulfate in the presence of a microbial flora and a greater amount of plasma inorganic phosphorus in its absence. Uremia resulted in a decrease in hematocrit and increase in plasma and muscle potassium that were similar for germfree and conventionalized rats. Plasma and muscle sodium, total plasma calcium, glucose, and total protein were essentially unchanged by microbial status or uremia. Because the foregoing differences in the metabolic and histopathologic changes of uremia are linked to the known difference in microbial status of the fasting bilaterally-nephrectomized rats that were studied, they are a tangible indication of ways by which the indigenous microbial flora and its composition may affect the course of acute uremia. The Rockefeller University Press 1966-01-31 /pmc/articles/PMC2138133/ /pubmed/5905241 Text en Copyright © 1966 by The Rockefeller University Press 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
Carter, Darryl
Einheber, Albert
Bauer, Heinz
Rosen, Hyman
Burns, Willard F.
THE ROLE OF THE MICROBIAL FLORA IN UREMIA : II. UREMIC COLITIS, CARDIOVASCULAR LESIONS, AND BIOCHEMICAL OBSERVATIONS
title THE ROLE OF THE MICROBIAL FLORA IN UREMIA : II. UREMIC COLITIS, CARDIOVASCULAR LESIONS, AND BIOCHEMICAL OBSERVATIONS
title_full THE ROLE OF THE MICROBIAL FLORA IN UREMIA : II. UREMIC COLITIS, CARDIOVASCULAR LESIONS, AND BIOCHEMICAL OBSERVATIONS
title_fullStr THE ROLE OF THE MICROBIAL FLORA IN UREMIA : II. UREMIC COLITIS, CARDIOVASCULAR LESIONS, AND BIOCHEMICAL OBSERVATIONS
title_full_unstemmed THE ROLE OF THE MICROBIAL FLORA IN UREMIA : II. UREMIC COLITIS, CARDIOVASCULAR LESIONS, AND BIOCHEMICAL OBSERVATIONS
title_short THE ROLE OF THE MICROBIAL FLORA IN UREMIA : II. UREMIC COLITIS, CARDIOVASCULAR LESIONS, AND BIOCHEMICAL OBSERVATIONS
title_sort role of the microbial flora in uremia : ii. uremic colitis, cardiovascular lesions, and biochemical observations
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2138133/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/5905241
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