The effect of a single injection of vinblastine sulfate was studied in 50 mongrel dogs. Nine of 34 dogs given 0.2 mg./Kg. of VLB died with gastrointestinal toxicity and the mortality rate increased as the dosage of VLB was increased. The morphologic pattern of leukocyte suppression and recovery in the bone marrow and blood was studied in detail in surviving animals.

The cells of the bone marrow were markedly affected by VLB. Within 4 hours there was an increase in the number of cells in metaphase and, by day 1, virtually all proliferating leukocytes and erythrocytes had disappeared. An orderly repopulation of the bone marrow followed.

The neutrophils, eosinophils, lymphocytes and monocytes of the blood were all markedly altered in concentration after VLB. Each type of cell first decreased to abnormally small numbers and then increased to abnormally large numbers in the blood. The curve of disappearance from and reappearance in the blood differed for each cell type.

The changes in blood neutrophil number and morphology were correlated with changes in the blood neutrophil precursor cells of the marrow. The following conclusions were reached concerning the neutrophils and the assumptions implicit to these conclusions were detailed.

1. In the dog, the marrow contains enough post-mitotic granulocytes to replace those lost from the blood for at least 3 to 4 days.

2. The release of mature neutrophils from the bone marrow is a function of the rate at which blood neutrophils are lost and proceeds normally even when the marrow granulocyte reserve is partially depleted.

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