Previous experimental work concerning enlargement of the thymus has dealt mainly with the regeneration which follows partial or subtotal removal, or with the regeneration which follows transplantation. We planned our experiments to obtain evidence of uncomplicated hypertrophy by removing one lobe and studying the enlargement of the remaining lobe. Our results clearly indicate that such hypertrophy takes place in young animals. They emphasize the functional importance of this gland before puberty, since the compensatory enlargement does not take place after puberty. The results further indicate that with the onset of involution there is a marked or almost total decline in the function of the gland, in spite of the fact that anatomically the thymus may persist to old age. With the appearance of a stimulus for regeneration, as, for instance, suprarenalectomy, the involuted gland takes on functional activity.
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1 September 1925
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September 01 1925
COMPENSATORY HYPERTROPHY OF THE THYMUS GLAND IN THE RAT
J. Marmorston-Gottesman,
J. Marmorston-Gottesman
From the Division of Laboratories of Montefiore Hospital and the Hospital for Joint Diseases, New York.
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Henry L. Jaffe
Henry L. Jaffe
From the Division of Laboratories of Montefiore Hospital and the Hospital for Joint Diseases, New York.
Search for other works by this author on:
J. Marmorston-Gottesman
From the Division of Laboratories of Montefiore Hospital and the Hospital for Joint Diseases, New York.
Henry L. Jaffe
From the Division of Laboratories of Montefiore Hospital and the Hospital for Joint Diseases, New York.
Received:
June 02 1925
Online ISSN: 1540-9538
Print ISSN: 0022-1007
Copyright, 1925, by The Rockefeller Institute for Medical Research New York
1925
J Exp Med (1925) 42 (3): 413–418.
Article history
Received:
June 02 1925
Citation
J. Marmorston-Gottesman, Henry L. Jaffe; COMPENSATORY HYPERTROPHY OF THE THYMUS GLAND IN THE RAT . J Exp Med 1 September 1925; 42 (3): 413–418. doi: https://doi.org/10.1084/jem.42.3.413
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