Abstract
In a recent publication 1 we suggested that copper may be transported in the serum. The data presented in this paper support this conception. Using dogs as experimental subjects, we have been able to demonstrate a substantial increase of copper in the serum following oral administration of aqueous solutions of copper sulfate.
The dogs were kept in individual cages and were maintained at a constant weight on a Purina chow diet. They were fasted for 18 hours, following which the basal copper level in the serum was determined from hour to hour for 7 hours. The results indicate that fasting serum copper values remain practically constant. Several days later, at the end of another 18-hour fast, a sample of serum was collected. Then the copper sulfate (CuSO4. 5H2O), dissolved in approximately 400 cc of distilled water, was administered immediately by stomach tube. Serum samples were collected one half hour later and at hourly intervals thereafter for 5 hours. The serum copper concentrations were determined by the method previously described 1 except that final color comparisons were made with a photoelectric colorimeter.
The effect of feeding varying amounts of copper sulfate is illustrated in Fig. 1. In each case the serum copper was raised definitely above the basal level. As the curves indicate, the larger doses of copper sulfate produced a more sustained rise in the serum copper than the smaller doses. The dogs retained 8 mg of CuSO4 5H2O per kilo very well, but doses as large as 16 mg per kilo usually caused emesis. We shall determine the maximum dose which can be retained and which will at the same time produce the maximum rise in serum copper.
Get full access to this article
View all access options for this article.
