Effects of Cyclic Starvation-Feeding and of Splenectomy on the Development of Hemosiderosis in Rat Livers |
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Authors: | G. W. Richter |
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Abstract: | The development of siderosis of liver and spleen was investigated in rats subjected alternately to periods of starvation and periods of feeding of diets rich in iron (0.71% or 1.23% Fe) or of control diets, during periods ranging up to 245 days. With 0.71% iron in the diet, cyclic starvation-feeding markedly enhanced the accumulation of iron in rat livers by comparison to feeding ad libitum even though rats fed ad libitum ingested far greater total amounts of iron than cyclically fed rats. With 1.23% iron in the diet, the concentration of iron in livers reached more or less the same plateau in cyclically starved-fed rats and in rats fed ad libitum (betwen 4 and 5 mg Fe/g wet weight); but the mean rate of accumulation of iron in the livers of cyclically starved and fed rats was more than twice that in rats fed ad libitum, whereas mean ingestion of iron per feeding day was only 16% higher in the former group. Surgical removal of the spleen enhanced the accumulation of iron in the liver in cyclically starved-fed rats and in rats fed ad libitum. Histologically, siderosis of the liver was moderate in rats fed the diet with 0.71% iron but was severe in rats fed the diet with 1.23% iron and most severe in those without spleens. Stainable iron was deposited in hepatocytes and in Kupffer cells. None of the rats developed cirrhosis of the liver. The data suggest that in rats a barrier to the absorption of iron from the gut, or to its later utilization, is surmounted if the concentration of iron in the food exceeds a certain limit value, somewhere between 0.71 and 1.23%. With iron in the food below this value, cyclic starvation-feeding markedly potentiates accumulation of iron in the liver in the course of several months, but siderosis is moderate. With iron in the food above the limit value, cyclic starvation-feeding and feeding ad libitum can equally lead to massive siderosis of the liver. |
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