Comparación de las constantes fisiológicas sanguíneas de los ratones cd1, heterocigotico et/+ y desnudo et/et
Main Article Content
Abstract
IS PAPER THE NORMAL BLOOD VALUES OF A NEW NAKED MICE MUTANT KNOWN AS ET/ET WERE COMPARED VS CD 1 AND HETEROCIGOTIC ET/. LEUKOCYTE AND DIFFERENTIAL COUNTS SHOWED THAT TOTAL LEUKOCYTES, LYMPHOCYTES, MONOCYTES AND EOSINOPHILS WERE SIGNIFICANTLY HIGHER (P < 0.05) IN THE ET/ET MICE THAN IN THE CD 1, AND THAT THERE WAS NO DIFFERENCE WITH THE ET/ ONES. IN 89% OF THE NAKED MICE, NEUTROPHIL HYPERSEGMENTATION WAS OBSERVED, WHILE ONLY A 10% OF THE HETEROCYGOTES PRESENTED IT, AND IT WAS NOT OBSERVED IN CD 1 MICE. TOTAL LYMPHOCYTES CD3 AND CD8 POPULATIONS, WAS HIGHER IN ET/ET (P<0.05) THAN IN CD 1 MICE, AND WITHOUT DIFFERENCE IN ET/ MICE. HEMATOCRITE VALUES WERE HIGHER (P<0.05) IN THE ET/ET MICE THAN IN CD 1 ONES. IN THE PLASMA PROTEIN COUNT, THE ET/ET MICE HAD LESS DENSITY AS COMPARED TO THE CD 1 ONES. THE ET/ET MALES PRESENTED A SIGNIFICANTLY HIGHER (P<0.05) CONCENTRATION IN THE ALPHAGLOBULIN FRACTION THAN IN THE ET/ET FEMALES (8.94% ± 1.81 VS 3.49% ± 0.69). THERE WERE SIGNIFICANT DIFFERENCES IN THE SPLEEN LYMPHOID CELL COUNT BETWEEN THE ET/ET MICE WHICH HAD 43 CELLS /50ML COMPARED TO 97.5 IN THE CD 1 MICE. MEANWHILE ET/ MICE HAD AN INTERMEDIATE VALUE THAT LACKED STATISTICAL SIGNIFICANCE. WITH THE RESULTS IN THE ANALYSES IT IS CONCLUDED THAT: THE ET/ET MICE HAVE WITHIN THEIR GENETIC CHARACTERISTICS A LEUKOCYTOSIS WITH LYMPHOCYTOSIS MONOCYTOSIS AND CIRCULATING EOSINOPHILIA, AND LYMPHOPENIA IN THE SPLEEN, AS WELL AS A NEUTROPHIL HYPERSEGMENTATION. THIS FINDING IS CONSIDERED AS AN ASSOCIATED POSSIBILITY TO ADRENAL HYPERTROPHY REPORTED BY OTHERS AUTHORS.
Keywords:
ET/ET MICE NUDE MICE HYPERSEGMENTED NEUTROPHILS ADRENAL HYPERTROPHY HEMOGRAM IMMUNODEFICIENT MICE GLYCOCORTICOID HYPERSECRETION
Article Details
License

Veterinaria México OA by Facultad de Medicina Veterinaria y Zootecnia - Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International Licence.
Based on a work at http://www.revistas.unam.mx
- All articles in Veterinaria México OA re published under the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 Unported (CC-BY 4.0). With this license, authors retain copyright but allow any user to share, copy, distribute, transmit, adapt and make commercial use of the work, without needing to provide additional permission as long as appropriate attribution is made to the original author or source.
- By using this license, all Veterinaria México OAarticles meet or exceed all funder and institutional requirements for being considered Open Access.
- Authors cannot use copyrighted material within their article unless that material has also been made available under a similarly liberal license.