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GLOMERULONEPHRITIS PRODUCED IN DOGS BY SPECIFIC ANTISERA

GLOMERULONEPHRITIS PRODUCED IN DOGS BY SPECIFIC ANTISERA The intravenous injection of rabbit antidog-placenta or antidog-kidney serum produced immediate evidence of glomerulonephritis in dogs. The lesions produced by the two agents were indistinguishable. The glomerulonephritis so induced may terminate in death within 8 days, may progress to a chronic form or may heal. The acute phase of the nephritis was usually associated with severe exudative and necrotizing renal lesions, while the pathologic sequences in surviving dogs were essentially reparative. However, 1 dog of 8 in the chronic phase developed a progressive chronic nephritis and died in uremia. Footnotes Submitted: 28 June 1955 http://www.deepdyve.com/assets/images/DeepDyve-Logo-lg.png The Journal of Experimental Medicine Rockefeller University Press

GLOMERULONEPHRITIS PRODUCED IN DOGS BY SPECIFIC ANTISERA

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Publisher
Rockefeller University Press
Copyright
© 1955 Rockefeller University Press
ISSN
0022-1007
eISSN
1540-9538
DOI
10.1084/jem.102.6.807
Publisher site
See Article on Publisher Site

Abstract

The intravenous injection of rabbit antidog-placenta or antidog-kidney serum produced immediate evidence of glomerulonephritis in dogs. The lesions produced by the two agents were indistinguishable. The glomerulonephritis so induced may terminate in death within 8 days, may progress to a chronic form or may heal. The acute phase of the nephritis was usually associated with severe exudative and necrotizing renal lesions, while the pathologic sequences in surviving dogs were essentially reparative. However, 1 dog of 8 in the chronic phase developed a progressive chronic nephritis and died in uremia. Footnotes Submitted: 28 June 1955

Journal

The Journal of Experimental MedicineRockefeller University Press

Published: Dec 1, 1955

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