Resorption of the formed dements 99 



We have said that in the living animal the macrocytase is localised 

 in the phagocytes of the organs and of the blood. Thus, when goose's 

 blood isinjected into the peritoneal cavity of theguinea-pig the red blood 

 corpuscles are digested within the macrophage and not in the fluid of 

 the peritoneal exudation. When, however, the same kind of blood is 

 injected a second or a third time, it is found that a certain number of 

 the red corpuscles become permeable and lose their haemoglobin, which 

 they give up to the fluid of the exudation, and only the membrane and 

 the nucleus remain. These are at once ingested by the macrophages 

 which under these conditions manifest a real excess of activity. In- 

 stead of sending out small processes, as they do after the first injec- 

 tion of blood, these phagocytes move about like true Amoebae, sending 

 out broad pseudopodia, and ingest not only the remains of the red 

 corpuscles but also those still intact 1 (Fig. 20). Ucder these con-[ios] 

 ditions macrocytase must undoubtedly 

 be found in the peritoneal plasma. 

 It is, however, easily demonstrable that 

 this ferment was not performed in the 

 fluid but has escaped from the leuco- 

 cytes that have undergone phagolysis. 

 After the rapid injection of alien blood 

 the phagocytes of the peritoneal lymph 

 gather into clumps, become immobile, 

 and for a time lose their phagocytic 

 power. It is only after the lapse of a 

 longer or shorter period that the leueo- 

 cytes recover from the phagolysis, arrive by macrop hages. 



in great numbers in the peritoneal cavity 

 and display their phagocytic energy. 



If the damage to the phagocytes the phagolysis is the actual 

 cause of the setting free of the intraleucocytic ferment, we have 

 only to prevent this phagolysis in order to inhibit the solution of 

 red blood corpuscles in the fluid of the exudation. For this purpose 

 it is sufficient to prepare guinea-pigs (which have already received 

 several injections of goose's blood) by means of an injection of fivsli 

 broth, of physiological salt solution, or of carbonic acid into the 



1 Sawtchenko (Arch, russes de Path., etc., St Petersb., 1901, t xi, p. 455) has 

 observed that leucocytes, after they have absorbed the specific fixative, acquir 

 property of ingesting red blood corpuscles with extraordinary rapidity. T 

 was able to condrm this fact. 



72 



