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On refection in rats and on the nature of the growth promoted by the addition of small quantities of milk to vitamin-free diets

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  15 May 2009

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1. In the course of this investigation we have dealt with many cases of refection, but during a period of several years we never obtained the condition except when raw potato starch was the carbohydrate in the synthetic diet. Recently, in the exceptional circumstances described in the text, we have had a few cases with rice starch.

2. Like other authors, we have always found that in refected rats the caeca are always enlarged and their contents the seat of specially great bacterial activity. The nature of the dominant organisms present has varied from case to case, and in one it was apparently a yeast. Nevertheless, there is a suggestion that certain organisms are more potent in promoting refection than others. In rice starch refection, such organisms seem to be present.

3. We have found that the administration of roughage in the manner described can, to a large extent, prevent the establishment of refection. The number of organisms in the caeca is then greatly reduced and the contents indeed may become nearly sterile.

4. Using potato starch as the carbohydrate of the diet, we have had no difficulty in reproducing the results of the early experiments published by one of us (Hopkins, 1912), but we found that to obtain a growth induced by administering very small quantities of milk to vitamin-free diets, the presence of this starch is necessary. Indeed, the growth so promoted calls for the same particularity in the carbohydrate supply as does the establishment of refection.

5. Nevertheless, we have obtained what seems to be conclusive evidence showing that the growth with milk is wholly independent of refection.

6. We have obtained some evidence that potato starch contains growth factors in association with protein which only becomes soluble when liberated by treatment with pepsin HCl. As our experimental results bearing on this, for some reason at present unexplained, have lacked constancy, we can only claim, that they are suggestive.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1945

References

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