Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
8985965 | Research in Veterinary Science | 2005 | 6 Pages |
Abstract
Results and conclusions: The rabbit spleen released a large amount of leucocytes (both lymphocytes and granulocytes) into the splenic venous blood (a venous increase of 33% in total leucocyte count), and also received more leucocytes (36-58% more in terms of concentration) from the artery than the kidney or intestine. Significantly fewer red blood cells were present in the renal venous blood than in the arterial blood (a venous reduction of 5% in erythrocyte count), but it remains to be clarified why and how the reduction was induced. More than 3-4% of water might be taken into the mesenteric venous blood during microcirculation (a venous reduction of 3-4% in erythrocyte-related parameters) and a significant number of leucocytes (mainly large leucocytes) in the mesenteric blood capillaries might migrate into the surrounding intestinal tissue (a venous reduction of 13% in leucocyte count).
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Authors
Z.-W. Yang, J.-A. Li, M.-H. Yang, Y.-S. Feng, Z. Tang, X.-S. Dai, H.-Y. Wang, Q.-Q. Yin, Y. Gao, J. Li, X.-L. He, Y. Zhang, Q. An,