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From the Laboratory of Bacteriology and Experimental Pathology, Stanford University, California
Abstract
Glycogen, therefore, disappears almost quantitatively from the canine liver during the first fifteen minutes of anaphylactic shock. This observation is in line with the initial hyperglycaemia in guinea-pig anaphylaxis recently reported by Zunz and La Barre (4). A reduction in liver glycogen during peptone poisoning was observed by McGuigan and Ross (5). The factors contributing to this rapid glycogen disappearance will be considered in a subsequent paper.
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W. W. DUKE ADVANCEMENT IN OUR KNOWLEDGE OF ALLERGY AS RELATED TO OTOLARYNGOLOGY DURING THE PAST TWO YEARS Arch Otolaryngol Head Neck Surg, November 1, 1926; 4(5): 430 - 444. [Abstract] [PDF] |
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