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  Vol. 76 No. 3, SEPTEMBER 1945 TABLE OF CONTENTS
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INTRAVENOUS INJECTION OF ACACIA

CLINICAL AND PHYSIOLOGIC EFFECTS ON PATIENTS WITH NEPHROTIC EDEMA

JOHN B. JOHNSON, M.D.; LLOYD H. NEWMAN, M.D.

Arch Intern Med. 1945;76(3):167-173.

Since this article does not have an abstract, we have provided the first 150 words of the full text PDF and any section headings.

The management of edema in patients with chronic glomerulonephritis complicated by the syndrome of hypoproteinemia and massive proteinuria continues to be unsatisfactory. The immediate cause of the edema is the reduced osmotic pressure resulting from the hypoproteinemia. No clinical methods are available at present by which one can stop the proteinuria or stimulate production of plasma protein so that the plasma protein concentration will rise sufficiently to eliminate the edema.

Administration of acacia in the treatment of nephrotic edema was first reported by Hartmann in 1933.1 Since that time, many clinical reports have appeared, and much experimental work has been done on this subject. For the most part these reports have been unfavorable, with the result that acacia is not used extensively in the treatment of nephrotic edema. The opposition to the use of acacia is based on the following observations:

  1. Cases have been reported in which there
. . . [Full Text PDF of this Article]


Author Affiliations

WASHINGTON, D. C.

From the Departments of Medicine and Biochemistry, Howard University School of Medicine and Freedmen's Hospital.



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