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Quarterly Journal of Experimental Physiology and Cognate Medical Sciences 41.3 pp 318-325
© The Physiological Society 1956
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THE HEPATIC AND INTESTINAL CONTRIBUTIONS TO THE THORACIC DUCT LYMPH

Bede Morris 1

1 The Kanematsu Memorial Institute of Pathology, Sydney Hospital, Sydney

1. In the anæsthetized cat, the liver lymph contributes about 30 per cent of the total thoracic duct lymph volume and approximately 40 per cent of the total thoracic duct protein. The remaining thoracic duct lymph is almost entirely derived from the intestines.

2. In the post-absorptive state, liver lymph contains about 90 per cent of the plasma concentrations of protein, phospholipid and cholesterol, whilst the intestinal lymph contains 50-60 per cent. There is a significant relationship between the concentrations of these substances in the plasma and lymph.

3. During fat absorption no significant change occurs in the liver lymph composition, whereas the intestinal lymph total fatty acid, phospholipid and cholesterol show large increases. During fat absorption an additional pre-albumin lipoprotein component appears in the intestinal lymph.

Note:

I should like to acknowledge the assistance of Dr. F. C. Courtice in the preparation of the manuscript, and the technical assistance of Miss Marianne Kearns.

Submitted on December 14, 1955







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Copyright © 1956 by the The Physiological Society.