Mice with hereditary, monogenic obese-hyperglycemic syndrome (ob/ob) were shown to have smaller adenohypophyses in comparison to their normal littermates from an age of 4 weeks onward. The size of the pars intermedia of obese mice was not, however, significantly different from that of normal littermates. Morphometric criteria strongly suggest hyperactivity of the cells of the pars intermedia of obese hyperglycemic mice.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAdult monkeys caught in the wild were housed in 2 harems and used for breeding during 7 successive years. Monkeys born in captivity and reared in the parental groups or in peer groups were also used for breeding. The live birth production rate amounted to 80% and reproduction was stable over the 7 year period.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSera from nine populations in Surinam, South America, were screened for antibodies against Entamoeba histolytica by the enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) technique and a precipitin test (gel diffusion or counterimmunoelectrophoresis). In two small surveys in 1974 and 1978, a high rate of clinically significant ELISA titers was found in a rather isolated group of Amerindians living near the Brazilian border, predominately in the youngest age groups. Amerindians living near the coast showed a low level of seropositivity.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe effects of corticosterone and hydrocortisone on the thymus, the pituitary--adrenal axis, delayed hypersensitivity, the corticosterone plasma level and the numbers of circulating nucleated and monocytic cells were investigated in the mouse. Short-term effects within 48 h after one or two corticoid injections and late effects 7 days after a regimen of 4 corticoid injections were discerned. In short-term experiments hydrocortisone was more active than corticosterone upon the induction of leukopenia and monocytopenia and the inhibition of delayed hypersensitivity.
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