Publication | Closed Access
Intestinal Lactase Activity in the Suckling Rat: Influence of Hypophysectomy and Thyroidectomy
95
Citations
26
References
1974
Year
NutritionInfant Rat IntestineGastroenterologySuckling RatEducationThyroid GlandParathyroid GlandDigestive TractGastrointestinal Peptide HormoneParathyroid HormoneAnimal PhysiologyIntestinal Lactase ActivityAnimal NutritionEndocrinologyAnimal SciencePhysiologyThyroid DiseaseThyroid HormoneMetabolismMedicine
Intestinal lactase activity, which is high in the infant rat intestine but falls to a low level by the end of the third week, fails to decline in animals hypophysectomized at the age of 6 days. Treating these animals with thyroxine lowers lactase activity to the control level at 24 days, but cortisone is only partly effective. Thyroidectomy at 6 days also results in persistence of high lactase activity; thyroxine again is more effective than cortisone in reducing activity. The thyroid gland appears to play a previously unsuspected role in intestinal maturation.
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