The change in surface tension behavior in the serum of sensitized guinea pigs is, as du Noüy has concluded for immunized rabbit serum, not referable to an antibody content, since we know that the capacity for transfer of sensitization remains in the serum indefinitely, while the increased time-drop phenomenon is a transitory manifestation. That this phenomenon cannot be invoked by a new antigen capable of calling out its specific antibody would seem to make this response one due to some basic stable alteration of a tissue active in the general process of sensitization: That this alteration is not one called out by such a simple toxic injury as a uranium nitrate nephritis is contributory evidence that the primary toxicity of the horse serum is not the specific factor involved.
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1 June 1928
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June 01 1928
SURFACE TENSION OF SERUM OF THE SENSITIZED GUINEA PIG : I. SURFACE TENSION CHANGES INCIDENT TO THE PROCESS OF SENSITIZATION.
Susan Griffith Ramsdell
Susan Griffith Ramsdell
From the Research Institute of Cutaneous Medicine, Philadelphia.
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Susan Griffith Ramsdell
From the Research Institute of Cutaneous Medicine, Philadelphia.
Received:
March 04 1928
Online ISSN: 1540-9538
Print ISSN: 0022-1007
Copyright, 1928, by The Rockefeller Institute for Medical Research New York
1928
J Exp Med (1928) 47 (6): 987–991.
Article history
Received:
March 04 1928
Citation
Susan Griffith Ramsdell; SURFACE TENSION OF SERUM OF THE SENSITIZED GUINEA PIG : I. SURFACE TENSION CHANGES INCIDENT TO THE PROCESS OF SENSITIZATION. . J Exp Med 1 June 1928; 47 (6): 987–991. doi: https://doi.org/10.1084/jem.47.6.987
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