«Effect of low protein diet on low dose
chronic aflatoxin B1 induced hepatic injury in rhesus monkeys.»
In one intriguing paper titled «Effect of Low Protein Diet on
Chronic Aflatoxin B1 - induced Liver Injury in Rhesus Monkeys,» the researchers describe something that undermines the conclusions Campbell drew from his own research.
The results of this earlier experiment were published in a paper called «Effect of Low Protein Diet on Low Dose
Chronic Aflatoxin B1 Induced Hepatic Injury in Rhesus Monkeys» in 1989.
Effect of Low Protein Diet on Low Dose
Chronic Aflatoxin B1 Induced Hepatic Injury in Rhesus Monkeys.
Not exact matches
«Longer - term studies of the effects of
aflatoxins will help to shed light on situations of
chronic exposure and effects on airways,» they wrote.
In these studies, a
chronic low dose of
aflatoxin produced precancerous lesions in monkeys fed 5 % casein but not in those fed 20 % casein; a
chronic medium dose saved the low - protein monkeys from precancerous lesions by — yup, you guessed it — killing them, while the high - protein monkeys suffered neither plight; and a
chronic high dose was finally able to give the high - protein monkeys pre-cancerous lesions.
With the exception of very specific cases of copper accumulation in the liver (specific to only a few breeds) and
aflatoxins accumulating from eating moldy corn (also a rare occurrence), the vast majority of case of
chronic active hepatitis in dogs are autoimmune in origin.
Chronic, low - dose exposures to
aflatoxin can suppress the immune system and cause cancer.