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  Vol. 71 No. 5, November 1955 TABLE OF CONTENTS
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Adrenal Cortical Steroids Jollowing Elective Operations

Quantitative Studies in the Peripheral Plasma of 17-Hydroxy- and 17-Desoxycorticosteroids

R. ELMAN, M.D.; T. E. WEICHSELBAUM, Ph.D.; J. C. MONCRIEF, M.D.; H. W. MARGRAF

AMA Arch Surg. 1955;71(5):697-705.

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 the quest for a better evaluation of the indications for the therapeutic use of corticotropin (ACTH) and of adrenocortical steroids (cortisone, etc.) in surgical diseases, more about the nature and degree of the adrenocortical response to operation must be known. To this end, investigators have used a number of methods, including measurements of certain adrenocortical steroids and their metabolic products excreted in the urine, the eosinophile count of the peripheral blood, and the uric acid-creatinine ratio in the urine. The present report deals with a study of adrenocortical function based on quantitative determinations in the peripheral blood at intervals before and after operation of two groups of adrenocortical steroids. The two groups are (a) 17-hydroxycorticosteroids (17-OHCS), which have in common both an alpha ketol and a hydroxy group in the 17 position and include, among others, compound E (cortisone) and compound F, and (b) 17-desoxycorticosteroids (17-desoxy CS), which differ . . . [Full Text PDF of this Article]


Author Affiliations

St. Louis

From the Department of Surgery, Washington University School of Medicine, and the Surgical Metabolism Laboratory of Barnes Hospital.


Footnotes

Submitted for publication Feb. 4, 1955.

This work was partially supported by Grant RG-2408 from U. S. Public Health Service and a grant from Mead Johnson & Company.



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