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Query: UMLS:C0011570 (
depression
)
172,036
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The concept of whether immune function was related to risk of recurrence was examined in patients with operable breast cancer in whom careful clinical and pathologic staging had been performed. Patients were classified according to the risk of recurrence. The "low risk" group included patients with minimal breast cancer, noninfiltrating cancer, or infiltrating cancer less than 1 cm with negative nodes. The "high ridk" group included patients with lesions greater than 1 cm or who had greater than or equal to 4 nodal metastases or who had macrometastases at Level II or III (apex). In the "intermediate risk" group were patients with infiltrating cancer less than 1 cm or with less than 4 nodal metastases at I only. Immune reactivity was assessed by skin tests, by measurement of absolute lymphocyte count, T and B cells, lymphocyte stimulation by mitogens and a battery of common antigens, serum immunoglobulins and complement levels. There were 134 patients with operable breast cancer and 63 patients with benign breast lesions. The breast cancer patients showed minimal or no impairment of DNCB skin test. Only patients with nodal metastases showed a slight but not significant impairment of DNCB responses (80% were DNCB positive compared to 90% in the controls.) The lymphocyte responses to mitogens were normal in the breast cancer patients, but there was a significant
depression
of lymphocyte responses to certain recall antigens such as Candida albicans and E coli. The absolute lymphocyte count and the T cell counts were normal, but B cells bearing complement receptors were decreased and B cells bearing sufface immunoglobulins were increased in the breast cancer patients. Analysis of immune function according to the pathologic stage of disease "risk of recurrence" categories showed no correlation with skin tests or lymphocyte levels. A striking and paradoxical finding was the demonstration that patients with "low risk" cancer overall had markedly lower responses to the battery of stimulating mitogens and antigens than found in patients with "high risk" or "intermediate risk" disease. Only the lymphocyte responses to
PHA
showed a significant linear correlation with increasing pathologic stage or "risk of recurrence." Current evidence from this study suggests that
PHA
response is markedly influenced by the primary tumor burdenand thus indirectly reflects the risk of recurrence.
...
PMID:Immunobiology of operable breast cancer: an assessment of biologic risk by immunoparameters. 96 94
One hundred three patients with varying stages of urological cancer (bladder, prostate, kidney) were investigated with regard to the following lymphocyte functions. T-cells were assessed numerically (E rosettes), their blastogenic response to phytohemagglutinin (pHA) was determined, and their cytotoxic potential against heterologous target cells in short-term presence of
PHA
(e.i.,
PHA
-dependent cellular cytotoxocity) was evaluated. Similarly, B cells were numerically assessed (EA rosettes), and their function was evaluated by antibody-dependent cellular cytotoxicity against antibody-coated deterologous target cells. The data on cancer patients, divided on the basis of extent of disease and prior radiation therapy, were compared to those of normal young and age-matched controls. Our investigations emphasize the importance of the following factors: (a) comparison of data with age-matched controls, since several lymphocyte functions appear to change with age; (b) use of multiple controls to compensate for the inherent variability found in certain tests; (c) minimized contamination by nonlymphoid cells in the purified cell preparation; and (d) the influence of certain treatment regimens (radiation, chemotherapy, etc.) on the results. Radiotherapy significantly depressed T-cell number with a
depression
of
PHA
blastogenic responses as well as
PHA
-dependent cellular cytotoxicity. When all of these conditions were taken into account, the urological cancer patients as a group were found to have a lower proportional value of E rosettes (T-cells) and a reduced
PHA
blastogenic responsiveness. Certain cancer patients displayed an elevated
PHA
-dependent cellular cytotoxicity as compared to age-matched controls, which may indicate the presence of activated cells in the presence of tumors. With this identification of a group of cancer patients with markedly depressed E rosette values and
PHA
responsiveness, it will now be possible to follow them clinically in comparison with a group of cancer patients with normal T-cell functions.
...
PMID:Critical evaluation of lymphocyte functions in urological cancer patients. 108 69
Studies of blood lymphocytes from 4 patients with pure red cell aplasia were performed with lymphocyte surface markers, and with various in vitro tests for lymphocyte functions. Pathologically low B-lymphocyte values were found. In contrast, no marked deviation from normals were seen for T-lymphocytes and Fc-receptor-bearing lymphocytes thought largely to represent non-B, non-T-lymphocytes. In 3 patients normal lymphocyte transformation was found with unspecific and specific mitogens, while the DNA-synthesis induced by unspecific mitogens was subnormal in the fourth patients. The lymphocyte-mediated
PHA
-induced cytotoxicity against target cells in vitro was subnormal in 2 patients, while no
depression
was seen in antibody-dependent cytotoxicity mediated in vitro by lymphocytes (K-cells). It is concluded that considerable immunological abnormalities are associated with pure red cell aplasia, and the possible significance of this is discussed.
...
PMID:Abnormal lymphocyte populations in pure red cell aplasia. 108 44
Fourteen coeliac patients on a gluten free diet (GFD) and 10 on a normal diet were studied by lymphocyte transformation in response to
PHA
to assess the integrity of cell-mediated immunity (CMI). Transformation was depressed in the majority taking a normal diet, with improvement after a GFD. In some patients the
depression
may have been due to a serum factor, as transformation was more nearly normal when the lymphocytes were cultured in pooled AB serum than in their own serum. There was no correlation between transformation and nutritional deficiencies. Mantoux tests were performed in some of these and other coeliac patients and there was a very significant reduction in the incidence of positive tests compared with controls. These findings provide evidence of depressed CMI in coeliac patients taking a normal diet with improvement on a GFD and may be of relevance to the high risk of malignancy in coeliac disease, further strengthening the case for a strict GFD.
...
PMID:Depressed cell-mediated immunity in coeliac disease. 108 62
Fourteen patients with nasopharyngeal carcinoma were evaluated immunologically prior to standard radiotion therapy. All had elevations of serum IgA, ranging from 300 mg/100 ml to 1000 mg/100 ml, with a mean value of 549 mg/100 ml. Seven patients demonstrated
depression
of cell-mediated immunity as measured by delayed hypersensitivity skin tests, total lymphocyte count, in vitro stimulation with
PHA
, and T-cell rosette formation. Elevation of serum IgA associated with
depression
of cell mediated immunity may be characteristic of patients with nasopharyngeal carcinoma.
...
PMID:Elevated IGA in carcinoma of the nasopharynx. 112 83
Cellular repopulation and recovery of
PHA
reactivity was investigated in the thymus of mice exposed to 400 R either on the whole body or with one leg protected. In the whole body irradiated cases both the cellular repopulation and the restoration of
PHA
reactivity in the thymus showed a cyclic pattern: an initial
depression
and a subsequent first recovery being followed by a secondary cellular depletion and decrease of reactivity before another recovery phase started. The phase of the secondary decrease lasted fo a similar period for both the cell number and reactivity, but was shifted in time and the reduction in reactivity began some 12 days later than that in the cell number. In the leg-shielded animals, the cellular repopulation progressed without cyclic changes, but the recovery of
PHA
reactivity maintained a cyclic pattern. However, due to a smaller secondary decrease, it was less pronounced than in the whole body irradiated cases. During the aging of mice from 50 to 90 day old, the cell number in the involuting thymus decreased to half of the original. The decrease in the cell population was associated with an about four-fold increase of
PHA
reactivity. The results were discussed in regard to the origin of the immunoreactive thymic cells. Arguments were presented in favour of the hypothesis that both the reactive and nonreactive cells originate from precursors in common, but require different lengths of time for maturation.
...
PMID:Cellular repopulation and recovery of the phytogemagglutinine (PHA) responding cell pool in the thymus of sublethally irradiated mice. 118 Aug 19
Effect of sex steroids, progesterone and estradiol-17beta, on transformation of human lymphocytes induced by
PHA
was investigated. Responses of peripheral lymphocytes from non-pregnant women to
PHA
was markedly reduced in the presence of progesterone at a concentration of 10(3) or 10(4) ng/ml. Estradiol-17beta, on the other hand, had no effects on the
PHA
-induced transformation under the present experimental conditions. The immunosuppressive property of progesterone may contribute to
depression
of maternal cell-mediated immunity against fetus during pregnancy.
...
PMID:Inhibitory effect of progesterone on the phytohaemagglutinin- induced transformation of human peripheral lymphocytes. 122 50
22 patients with Trichophyton rubrum infection were studied for some of their immunological parameters. The trichophytin skin test performed with commercially available Dermatophytin (Hollister-Stier) gave immediate positive reaction in 3 patients. All the other patients gave negative delayed and retarded reactions. In vitro response to
PHA
of the peripheral lymphocytes was significantly depressed in patients compared to the controls. No relationship could, however, be established between the severity, duration or extent of the disease and the
depression
of the lymphocyte response. IgG and IfA were found to be within normal limits. IgM levels were significantly depressed which was probably artefactual in nature.
...
PMID:A study of the immunological status of patients with dermatophytoses. 122 66
The cell-mediated immune status of 20 apparently healthy children from families with a history of leprosy has been studied. They have been compared with 20 age- and sex-matched controls from families with no history of leprosy. Lymphocyte transformation tests using
PHA
, PPD and lepromin and skin tests to lepromin, PPD and candida were carried out. No evidence of a
depression
of cell-mediated immunity in the children from families with leprosy was obtained. The only two children giving a negative Mitsuda lepromin skin test both subsequently developed leprosy in the succeeding 16 months. One was classified histologically as indefinite lepromatous and the other as borderline lepromatous. This emphasizes the practical significance of a negative lepromin skin test in an endemic leprosy area as a prognosis of clinical lepromatous leprosy.
...
PMID:Cell-mediated immunologic status of healthy members of families with a history of leprosy. 124 86
A gradual increase in spontaneous lymphocyte DNA synthesis was demonstrated in each trimester of pregnancy. Autoradiographic studies indicated that lymphocytes were primarily responsible for this activity.
PHA
-induced lymphocyte transformation in both fetal calf serum and autologous serum was significantly reduced in the second and third trimesters of pregnancy. Spontaneous lymphocyte DNA synthesis was significantly reduced in patients with mild pre-eclampsia. However, no significant differences were seen in patients with severe pre-eclampsia in the third trimester of pregnancy compared with the normal control subjects. No evidence was adduced to implicate inhibitory humoral factors affecting the peripheral blood lymphocytes in pregnany patients in experiments in which washed lymphocytes were cultured in medium containing heterologous serum. In vitro experiments demonstrated that cortisol, progesterone and HPL caused a significant reduction in lymphocyte DNA synthesis, and HGH and HCG had a variable effect. However, only cortisol was regularly inhibitory at physiological concentrations. The progesterone effect was dose-related, producing 90 per cent inhibition of activity at a concentration of 10 mug/ml. No synergism could be shown between HPL and progesterone on lymphocyte transformation. The increase in activity of circulating immunoreactive cells during pregnancy and its
depression
with the onset of pre-eclampsia is discussed.
...
PMID:Changes in lymphocyte function during pregnancy. 125 92
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