Studies in calium metabolism in the rabbit

Abstract

(1) Prior to pregnancy the calcium content in the blood of full-grown rabbits was found to vary "between 13 and 15 m.gm. per 100 c.c. serum, with suggestions of a significantly regular rise and fall. During the early period of pregnancy no difference between the serum-calciurn content of the pregnant and the non-pregnant does was found. (2) 7 to 10 days before parturition the serum-calcium, then high, commences to fall and one, two or three days before parturition there is a further and more sudden fall to a minimum. (3) After parturition the calcium content is restored to normal by a rise as sudden as was the previous fall, but about the 19th day of the lactation period, or thereabout, there is a second sudden fall to often a still lower minimum than was noted before parturition. Following this fall there is a sudden return to normal, but in some cases the return ends in a remarkable maximum of calcium in the serum, higher than any previously exhibited. Soon afterwards there is a return to normal, the calcium level then remaining steady till the end of the lactation period. (4) Data collected from several rabbits of both sexes, excluding those relating to the periods of pregnancy and lactation, show little indication of any sex-dimorphism in calcium-metabolism. If, however, these data are computed and the true mean with probable error found for each sex it is seen that indeed there is a significant sex difference. 'The difference between the sexes was found to be more than five times its probable error, and if five times is taken as the limit of significance there is sex-dimorphism, the males having a higher serum-calcium content than the females. (5) During the period of gestation foetal blood contains less serum-calcium than maternal until the last week of pregnancy when the foetal serum-calcium equals the maternal and in some cases surpasses it. This is to be explained by the sudden decrease in serum-calcium in the maternal blood. After parturition when the maternal value is again constant the maternal serum-calcium level is higher than the foetal. This relation persists till the young rabbit is about a month old when its serum-calcium level approaches that of its mother

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