Abdul-Karim A, Ramade F, Baylé J D
C R Seances Soc Biol Fil. 1987;181(1):16-21.
Early embryonic bursectomy (BFX) disturbed the adrenocortical functioning. The stress-unresponsive period that occurred in controls, and lasted for 2-3 weeks after hatching, no longer appeared in BFX chicks. In contrast, the magnitude of the stress-induced hypercorticosteronemia was much lower in BFX than in sham-operated 5 week-old chicken. It was assumed that such adrenocortical dysfunction was due to bursal deprivation, since grafting bursal buds onto the chorio-allantoic membrane of BFX embryos restored all the parameters under study, i.e., the post-hatching stress unresponsive period and the high magnitude of stress-induced responses in adults. Factor(s) involved in such interregulation are not known but do not seem to affect directly adrenocortical cells because intramuscular injection of a moderate dose of ACTH resulted in the same hypercorticosteronemia whether 3 day-old and 5 week-old chicks had been bursectomized or sham-operated.