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  Vol. 34 No. 4, April 1937 TABLE OF CONTENTS
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PERITONITIS

II. THE EFFECT ON BLOOD PRESSURE OF PROTEIN-FREE EXTRACTS OF THE PERITONEAL CONTENT AND OF FILTRATES FROM PURE CULTURES OF BACTERIA

PAUL H. HARMON, M.D., Ph.D.; HENRY N. HARKINS, M.D., Ph.D.

Arch Surg. 1937;34(4):580-590.

Since this article does not have an abstract, we have provided the first 150 words of the full text PDF and any section headings.

In previous experimental studies on peritonitis, we demonstrated1 a vasodepressant toxic substance in peritoneal washings. The washings from normal animals and from animals on which an extensive gastrointestinal operation had been done, as well as washings from animals with experimental bile peritonitis, were innocuous under the same experimental conditions. Since the vasodepressant toxin occurred in the exudate after death from bile peritonitis, we suspected that the colon bacillus or one of the large gram-positive obligate anaerobic organisms might be a possible source of the substance. This association of bacteria with the production of a toxic substance has been demonstrated by many authors2 in experimental intestinal obstruction and in experimental acute pancreatic necrosis. It has likewise been known for a long time that the colon bacillus3 and allied organisms4 produce a toxic substance that brings about rapid death when administered to laboratory animals by the intravenous or . . . [Full Text PDF of this Article]


Author Affiliations

CHICAGO

From the Douglas Smith Foundation and from the Service of Dr. Edmund Andrews, Department of Surgery, the University of Chicago.


Footnotes

Read in part before the Chicago Surgical Society, Feb. 7, 1936.



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