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Influence of the Rate of Secretion on the Urea Concentration of Saliva.
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1929
Year
UrologyHuman SalivaOral CavityBioanalysisPhysiologyOral BiologySecretion RateToxicologyUrea ConcentrationHench,1 Schmitz2Clinical ChemistrySalivary GlandMetabolismMedicineIngestion
Observations of Hench,1 Schmitz2 and others have shown that the concentration of urea in human saliva obtained by chewing paraffin averages about 80% of that of the blood. The published figures from which this average has been obtained show wide variations in different individuals. Those of Hench1 vary from 50 to 130%, those of Schmitz2 from 58 to 128%, and unpublished observations made in this laboratory in 1921 from 58 to 110%.Specimens of saliva secreted at slow and at rapid rates were obtained from each of 16 individuals, and their urea concentrations (urea plus ammonia) compared with that of blood taken at the same time. The slow specimens were obtained without stimulation, the rapid ones by chewing paraffin. (Table I.)All the subjects show a lower urea concentration in the rapidly secreted specimens, the average difference between slow and fast specimens being 46 mg. per 100 cc. The high figures obtained when the secretion rate was low are no doubt partly due to accumulated ammonium salts in the mou...