Archives of internal medicine . J- 3 CL: ^ . i r 3 ^ - ?: a o i o c o -2 : T3 _ OI - -r 5 Tl X Ol — -*?> o> T3 OJ = ^ « C « h ? — 3 .2 >1 Ol ,£} — j£ o tpl ?* 3 -51 a- ^ -5 5 I -? 2 i-> & K5 174 ARCHIVES OF INTERNAL MEDICINE There seem?, furthermore, to exist under - ircumstances sucha determined and definite flow of pancreatic juice, that repeated injectionof epinephrin is not sufficient to stop it permanently. One fact which militates against this as a function of normal physi-ology, is that the flow sometimes occurs late in the life of the animal, andin some experiments the flow


Archives of internal medicine . J- 3 CL: ^ . i r 3 ^ - ?: a o i o c o -2 : T3 _ OI - -r 5 Tl X Ol — -*?> o> T3 OJ = ^ « C « h ? — 3 .2 >1 Ol ,£} — j£ o tpl ?* 3 -51 a- ^ -5 5 I -? 2 i-> & K5 174 ARCHIVES OF INTERNAL MEDICINE There seem?, furthermore, to exist under - ircumstances sucha determined and definite flow of pancreatic juice, that repeated injectionof epinephrin is not sufficient to stop it permanently. One fact which militates against this as a function of normal physi-ology, is that the flow sometimes occurs late in the life of the animal, andin some experiments the flow seems to usher in the end. In such cas -the animals can be kept alive, however, for long periods, during whichpancreatic flow tends to occur, by repeated injections of epinephrin: aftereach of which the blood-pressure, previously at a moribund level, is raisto a height compatible with life. It may be argued that the conditi such a flow are beyond the pale of normal physiological acti


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