Philip D. McMaster
Rockefeller University
82 Papers
1.6K Citations
Philip D. McMaster is an academic researcher from Rockefeller University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Lymph & Lymphatic system. The author has an hindex of 32, co-authored 82 publications.
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Papers
The formation of agglutinins within lymph nodes.
TL;DR: Agglutinins are formed within the draining lymph nodes of mice, following intradermal injections of killed cultures of microorganisms.
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The effect of the pulse upon the formation and flow of lymph
TL;DR: The ears of rabbits were perfused with defibrinated rabbit's blood in such a way that pulsation could be imparted to the perfusate or withheld from it at will, causing a slight flow of lymph in ears that were becoming edematous, whereas when it was pulsatile the lymph flow was enormous.
The primary immune response in mice. I. The enhancement and suppression of hemolysin production by a bacterial endotoxin.
TL;DR: The manner in which a single injection of S. typhosa endotoxin effects the primary hemolysin response to sheep erythrocytes in the mouse has been shown to depend on the dosage, route, and time of administration of the endotoxin, as well as on the route employed for the injection of antigen.
The lymphatic participation in human cutaneous phenomena : a study of the minute lymphatics of the living skin.
TL;DR: Tests indicate that in both instances the lymphatic wall behaves like a semipermeable membrane, which makes plain the fact that every intradermal injection is an intralymphatic one, often preponderantly such, while furthermore every local injection into the skin becomes within a few minutes a general one, so rapidly is the introduced material transported to the blood.
134
The effect of the pulse on the spread of substances through tissues.
TL;DR: The pulsation of blood vessels in the ear of the rabbit greatly increases the rate of the spread of dye introduced into the subcutaneous tissue, and a rapid interstitialSpread of dye occurs in tissues becoming edematous while perfused with a pulsatile flow of blood.
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