BILE PIGMENTS OF JAUNDICE*
1960; American Society for Clinical Investigation; Volume: 39; Issue: 1 Linguagem: Inglês
10.1172/jci104011
ISSN1558-8238
AutoresHarry N. Hoffman, Fred F. Whitcomb, Hugh R. Butt, Jesse L. Bollman,
ResumoCurrent concepts concerning the formation and metabolism of bile pigments hold that bilirubin is formed from the catabolism of hemoglobin by the reticuloendothelial system, mainly in bone mar- row and spleen, and that the bilirubin is then transported to the liver where it is modified and ex- creted.via the biliary system.These concepts are based largely on the studies by Mann, Magath and Bollman (1, 2) of the effect of total hepatectomy on mammals which show that after complete extirpation of the liver, indirect-reacting bile pig- ment was formed and accumulated in the serum progressively during the survival period of the animal.Bollman and Mann (3) noted that as the amount of bilirubin in the blood increased after hepatectomy, the van den Bergh reaction changed from an indirect to a direct reaction and bilirubin began to appear in the urine.Since the original work of van den Bergh, Snapper and Muller (4, 5) on the application of the Ehrlich diazo reaction to the quantitative meas- urement of the serum bilirubin and their observa- tion of the differing character of the reaction in various types of jaundice, many investigators have sought to determine the fundamental basis for these differences.Despite a voluminous litera- ture on the subject which has accumulated for more than 40 years, disagreement and lack of exact knowledge are still evident.In this paper we can cite only recent surveys encompassing the many concepts which have been proposed (6-9).Recently the studies of Cole and Lathe (10) have provided a new and important approach to
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