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Query: UMLS:C0011570 (
depression
)
172,036
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
A significant
depression
in cell-mediated immunity as measured by lymphoproliferative responses to phytohemagglutinin and responsiveness to mixed lymphocyte culture was observed when adult lymphocytes or cord blood lymphocytes were incubated with increasing concentrations of bilirubin. The inhibitory effect of bilirubin could only be demonstrated with suboptimal concentrations of
PHA
(0.01 and 0.005%) and was more marked in premature infants than in term neonates or adults. This effect was partially reversible after short preincubation with bilirubin, but was more protracted with preincubations of 24 hours or more. Inhibition of MLC responsiveness of 80.1 plus or minus 5.1% was also demonstrated at a bilirubin concentration of 20 mg/dl. Specific cytotoxicity to rubella virus-infected cells, measured by a 51Cr-release microassay, was not found to be depressed. Bilirubin thus appears to have an inhibitory effect on immune responsiveness which is greater on the afferent limb than on the effrent limb of immunity.
...
PMID:Inhibitory effects of bilirubin on cellular immune responses in man. 12 27
The long term alterations of T and B lymphocytes in the peripheral blood of patients treated with regional irradiation for various malignancies were examined. Eighty patients were tested at various intervals after the completion of irradiation. Absolute lymphocyte counts, the percentages of T cells and B cells, and the blastogenic response to phocyte reaction (MLR) were determined. Nearly all patients initially had absolute lymphocytopenia and one-third of the patients tested 3 years after completion of irradiation had lymphocyte counts which were more than two standard deviations below the normal range. The
depression
was not specific for either the T-or B-lymphocyte subpopulations. The
PHA
response was impaired for extended periods of time after the completion or irradiation. Differences in the mean response of lymphocytes to
PHA
were noted for all concentrations of the mitogen, but were most marked with suboptimal concentrations of
PHA
. The MLR was below the lower limits of normal in 70% of the recently irradiated patients. There was a gradual recovery of the ability to respond in the MLR, and all patients tested more than 4.5 years after the completion of therapy had a normal response. These results were compared with those obtained in patients treated with total lymphoid irradiation for Hodgkin's disease. Although three appeared to be a difference in the effect of radiation on lymphocyte subpopulations in the two groups, the effects on lymphocyte function were similar.
...
PMID:The long term effects of radiation of T and B lymphocytes in the peripheral blood after regional irradiation. 14 54
In vitro tests of cellular immune responses, using lymphocyte transformation tests and rosette tests for T and B lymphocytes, were studied in a cross-section analysis of a total of fifty-five patients in six groups (non-pregnant, 2--3 months pregnant, 4--5 months pregnant, 6--7 months pregnant, at parturition and 3 months after parturition). No pregnancy-related changes were found in the numbers of T, B or null cells, nor changes in
PHA
, PWM or MLC responses, but a significant reversible
depression
of the PPD response was found in the second half of pregnancy.
...
PMID:Cellular immunity in pregnancy: blast transformation and rosette formation of maternal T and B lymphocytes: A cross-section analysis. 14 81
The influence of irradiation upon human lymphocytes was studied using lymphocyte transformation tests and formation of E and HEAC rosettes. Irradiation was given in vitro using doses between 0 and 50,000 rad. It was shown that blast transformation after stimulation with T-cell stimulating agents (as
PHA
, PWM, Con.A and PPD) was suppressed by irradiation. The effect of irradiation upon T lymphocytes was also shown in different kinds of MLC experiments. Both the effect of irradiation upon rosetts formation and the influence of irradiation upon already formed rosettes were analyzed. The ability of lymphocytes to form E rosettes was affected after irradiation with 500 rad: there were fewer E rosettes with 3 SRBCs, decrease in total number of E rosettes and more null cells, with no
depression
of the number of HEAC rosettes formed. Already formed E and HEAC rosettes were totally unaffected of irradiation, and this radioresistance was also observed for 18-hour-old rosettes. The ability to form spontaneous E rosettes was decreased after irradiation of the lymphocytes with 100 rad; increasing doses did not cause further
depression
, and already formed spontaneous E rosettes were radioresistant. The mechanisms involved in E-rosette formation thus seem to be radiosensitive.
...
PMID:In vitro radiosensitivity of human T and B lymphocytes evaluated using lymphocyte transformation tests and rosette formation tests. 14 70
The relative growth of neonatal and maternal lymphocytes was studied in
PHA
-stimulated mixed short-time whole-blood cultures, with particular regard to a possible inhibition of the maternal cells. For comparison, neonatal and maternal cells were grown separately. No uniform inhibition was observed, although there was an average 34%
depression
of growth of the maternal cells in the mixed cultures.
...
PMID:Neonatal and maternal lymphocytes in whole-blood cultures: absence of strong interaction. 15 82
Hyperuricaemia in Down's syndrome is unreleated to the activity of phosphoribosylamidotransfrease, which catalyses the activity of the first specific step on the purine biosynthetic pathway, and to the activity of hypoxanthine phosphoribosyltransferase and phosphoribosylpyrophosphate synthetase, abnormalities of which are known to be associated with hyperuricaemia. Immunological studies involving serum immunoglobulins, natural E. coli antibodies, test immunization with pneumococcal polysaccharide type III (PnPS), in vitro lymphocyte transformation to mitogens, and pokeweed mitogen (PWM) induced immunoglobulin production showed no difference between hyperuricaemic or normouricaemic Down's patients and institutionalized controls. The Down's patients had higher serum IgA, IgG and IgE, and some also produced more immunoglobulin in PWM-stimulated lymphocyte cultures when compared to normal healthy controls. However, both patients with Down's syndrome and the institutionalized controls had significantly lower responses to PnPs than normal healthy controls. The only deficiency confined to the Down's patients was a signficant
depression
in delayed hypersensitivity to dinitrochlorobenzene. These findings indicate that the in vivo abnormality of depressed cellular and humoral immunity in Down's patients is not paralleled by in vitro function as measured by
PHA
lymphocyte transformation and immunoglobulin production by PWM-stimulated lymphocytes. There is also no apparent link between a putative defect in purine metabolism in Down's patients and any immunological abnormalities.
...
PMID:Immunological and purine enzyme studies on hyperuricaemic and normouricaemic patients with Down's syndrome. 15 48
Cultures of dispersed spleen cells, prepared from MDV-infected chickens with MD visceral lymphomas, showed marked
depression
of responsiveness to the T cell mitogen
PHA
, as measured by 3H-Tdr incorporation in cells in vitro. When data are expressed quantitatively in terms of cpm/10(5) viable cells, the functional depletion of
PHA
-responsive cells appear to result from lower levels of 3H-Tdr incorporation in the
PHA
-stimulated spleen cultures from chickens with acute MD symptoms, as compared to similar cultures from uninfected isolator-reared control chickens. It is suggested that
depression
of
PHA
-induced blastogenesis is spleen cell cultures from chickens with acute MD reflects virus-related alterations in T lymphocytes.
...
PMID:Depression of in vitro responsiveness to phytohemagglutinin in spleen cells cultured from chickens with Marek's disease. 16 67
Cell-mediated immune response was studied in experimental herpetic infection in mice. Our data suggest that herpes simplex virus induced immunosuppression in mice. This
depression
was documented by the unresponsiveness of the lymphocytes to
PHA
stimulation in vitro and by the enhanced susceptibility of adult mice to Coxsackie B virus infection. Our data also suggest that levamisole, a potent immunostimulant drug, had no effect on the unresponsiveness of the lymphocytes to
PHA
stimulation.
...
PMID:Experimental immunosuppression induced by herpes simplex virus. 17 50
Cellular immune responses of patients with histologically confirmed lung carcinoma were assessed in vivo using cutaneous response and in vitro with a microlymphocyte blastogenic transformation (LBT) assay. In addition, correlation of the cutaneous response with the migration inhibitory factor (MIF) assay and LBT response was examined. The results indicated that cutaneous responses seen in patients with cancer of the lung were consistently lower than similar responses in normal controls (p less than 0.001). Similarily, the percentage of positive cutaneous responses seen with patients included in this study was lower than the frequencies reported by others. Stimulation of cells from lung cancer patients by
PHA
-M was also depressed when compared to similar lymphocytic responses in normal volunteers (p less than 0.001). The correlation between cutaneous response to tuberculin and the in vitro assays was high. The few instances of disparity demonstrate the need to utilize more than one assay in evaluating cellular immune functions. These data would support the work of others that indicate a
depression
of cellular immunity in advanced malignancy.
...
PMID:Cellular immunity in neoplasia. Antigen and mitogen responses in patients with bronchiogenic carcinoma. 17 58
The immune responses of 60 patients undergoing therapeutic irradiation were evaluated according to four anatomical sites irradiated. In vitro lymphocyte transformation tests with
PHA
, Con-A, and PWM and quantitative assays of IgG, IgA, and IgM were performed on blood obtained from each patient before and during therapy, and two weeks, two months, and six months after therapy. At these same testing intervals, skin tests with PPD, mumps antigen, Candida antigen, and SD-SK were performed. During irradiation, the mean values of all lymphocyte transformation tests were depressed, varying from 48% to 64% of pretreatment baseline. This
depression
persisted until about two months after completion of treatment. By six months, response rose to pretreatment values. When response was evaluated according to sites irradiated with all mitogens, the pelvic and pelvic plus abdominal groups showed consistently greater
depression
than the chest or head and neck groups. Radiation effected no significant changes in the mean values of IgG, IgA or IgM. A decrease in skin sensitivity was noted during radiation; 73% of the subjects responded positively before therapy while only 53% had at least one positive test during therapy. By two months postirradiation, 73% of the group clinically free of disease had positive skin tests. A comparison of clinical condition with test results is significant when one considers the 17 patients who developed metastatic disease or died from disease. The
depression
for all three mitogens during radiation therapy was greater for this group. Of the 17, only four had IgG levels in the normal range, and consistently fewer positive skin tests were demonstrated.
...
PMID:Effect of therapeutic irradiation on the immune responses. 17
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