A STUDY OF RENAL SECRETION DURING TARTRATE NEPHRITIS
Open Access
- 1 October 1913
- journal article
- Published by Rockefeller University Press in The Journal of Experimental Medicine
- Vol. 18 (4), 347-352
- https://doi.org/10.1084/jem.18.4.347
Abstract
After the intravenous introduction of a solution containing sodium chloride and urea into the rabbit during pronounced tartrate nephritis, all the chloride reappears in the urine within forty-eight hours. On the other hand, the nitrogen of the urine remains far below that usually eliminated by the normal animal under the experimental conditions; in other words, little or none of the urea injected is excreted by the kidney. In the light of the histological findings these results are interpreted to mean that under normal conditions chlorides and water are passed through the glomerular mechanism, whereas urea becomes a urinary constituent by way of the convoluted tubules. These results constitute a direct confirmation of the older observations of others concerning the elimination by the kidney of the substances under discussion. No evidence was obtained that the glomerulus may take over the function of the tubular epithelium.Keywords
This publication has 2 references indexed in Scilit:
- TARTRATE NEPHRITIS, WITH ESPECIAL REFERENCE TO SOME OF THE CONDITIONS UNDER WHICH IT MAY BE PRODUCEDThe Journal of Experimental Medicine, 1913
- A Study of the renal Epithelium in various types of Acute experimental Nephritis and of the Relation which exists between the epithelial Changes and the Total output of Urine.1912