| 1915 - 1066 páginas
...develop. This mechanical influence must, therefore, be a factor in the lessened tendency after splenctomy to the jaundice which follows blood destruction due...the liver more gradually and in a more dilute form. BIBLIOGRAPHY. 1. Pearce, RM, Austin, JH, and Krumbhaar, EB, The Relation of the Spleen to Blood Destruction... | |
| Hobart Amory Hare - 1916 - 484 páginas
...with bile pigment more readily occurs and jaundice is more apt to develop. The authors conclude that this mechanical influence must, therefore, be a factor...the liver more gradually and in a more dilute form. In studying the influence of diet upon anemia following splenectomy, the experiments of Pearce, Austin... | |
| 1916 - 406 páginas
...spleen be an active factor in (6) Jour. Bxp. Med., September, 1915. (7) Jour. Bxp. Med., December, 1915. destroying the erythrocytes or whether it plays merely...disintegration occurs in other organs, notably in the lymph-nodes and bone-marrow, and the hemoglobin from these organs passes not into the portal but into... | |
| 1916 - 1520 páginas
...disintegration in the spleen, after the action of hemolytic poisons, and the hemoglobin there liberated passes directly to the liver. When the spleen is removed,...the lymph nodes and bone marrow, and the hemoglobin passes into the «neral circulation and reaches the liver more gradually and in a more dilute form.... | |
| Richard Mills Pearce - 1918 - 476 páginas
...undergo their final disintegration after the action of haemolytic poisons, and that the haemoglobin there liberated passes by the portal system directly...disintegration occurs in other organs, notably in the lymph-nodes and bone-marrow, and the haemoglobin from these organs passes not into the portal but into... | |
| University of Pennsylvania. John Herr Musser Department of Research Medicine - 1916 - 462 páginas
...develop. This mechanical influence must, therefore, be a factor in the lessened tendency after splenctomy to the jaundice which follows blood destruction due...the liver more gradually and in a more dilute form. BIBLIOGRAPHY. 1. Pearce, RM, Austin, JH, and Krumbhaar, EB, The Relation of the Spleen to Blood Destruction... | |
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