The uptake, reflux and excretion of bromosulfophthalein (BSP) were studied on a model of total warm ischaemia for 30 min (group 1) or 60 min (group 2) followed by reperfusion for 45 min in the isolated perfused rat liver of unfasting rats. In group 1, the BSP hepatic uptake was comparable to control livers (30 s ischaemia plus 45 min reperfusion), but was significantly reduced in group 2. The reflux of BSP from liver to perfusate in group 1 and group 2 resulted in the appearance of secondary concentration time peaks of BSP in the reservoir perfusate. This result suggests that ischaemia-reperfusion induced a qualitative change in BSP pharmacokinetics. Excretion of the dye into bile was significantly impaired in group 2 only. The leakage of lactate dehydrogenase into the perfusate was increased moderately in both group 1 and group 2 in comparison to the controls, suggesting a low degree of liver parenchymal injury. In conclusion, the results of this investigation showed that BSP pharmacokinetics were not only undergoing quantitative changes but also a qualitative change in the model of ischaemia-reperfusion injury of the liver obtained from fed rats and may thus serve as a highly sensitive indicator of liver viability.
This study deals with the changes in position of the office of moravian land captain during the reign of last members of house Luxemburg in Moravia, since the ascension of king Venceslaus IV. in the year 1411, over the reign of Sigismund of Hungary, to the granting of Moravian margravate to Albrecht V. of Habsburg in october 1423. The author corrects some deficiencies of existing literature and specifies the chronology of holders of this office. Based on the analysisi of sources are also reconstructed purviews and areas, in which the land captain could intervene and their changes in time of hussite wars and reign of different margraves. This work also captures the way of appointment and deposition of land captains by the ruler and different strategies and attempts to alternate arrangement of administration of Moravian margravate by Sigismund of Hungary, when he tried to sideline this office, which became more and more dependent on the forming high nobility estate.