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Query: UMLS:C0021051 (
immunodeficiency
)
71,517
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
We studied a five-year-old girl with several autoimmune disorders and a 16-year-old boy with acquired
agammaglobulinemia
to determine whether aberrations of immunoregulatory T cells could explain some instances of
immunodeficiency
or autoimmunity. The normal peripheral blood T-cell population, as defined by specific heteroantiserums, is 20 per cent TH2+ and 80 per cent TH2-. Human suppressor cells are TH2+, whereas helper cells are TH2-. In addition, each subset expresses Ia antigens upon activation. Our patient with autoimmune disease had no demonstrable TH2+ cells, and her lymphocytes could not be induced to suppress. Her circulating T cells were of an activated-helper phenotype, i.e., TH2-,Ia+. In contrast, in the boy with
agammaglobulinemia
, the T-cell population was predominantly of an activated-suppressor phenotype, i.e., TH2+,Ia+. This patient's T cells abrogated both his own and his histoidentical brother's B-cell secretion of immunoglobulins. We conclude that the characterization of T cells may provide insight into the causes of a number of abnormal immune states in man.
...
PMID:Abnormalities of immunoregulatory T cells in disorders of immune function. 15 8
Histologic, immunohistologic and electron microscopic findings in three children with primary immunodeficiencies are reported. Classical X-linked infantile
agammaglobulinemia
Bruton was present in case 1 (male, aged 16 years), selective cellular
immunodeficiency
with thrombopenia in case 2 (male, aged 2 1/2 years) and non-lymphopenic severe combined immunodeficiency in case 3 (male, aged 1 3/4 years). At autopsy, all three cases exhibited unusual types of pneumonia. In case 2 a generalized cytomegalovirus infection was present. Case 3 disclosed panmyelopathia and chronic liver lesions due to severe GvH-reaction subsequent to bone marrow transplantation. A detailed morphologic study of the immune system revealed distinct alterations in the thymus, spleen, and lymph nodes and the lymphatic tissues of the gastrointestinal tract characteristic of an
immunodeficiency
state, either humoral (case 1), cellular (case 2) or combined (case 3).
...
PMID:Pathomorphology of humoral, cellular and combined primary immunodeficiencies. 19 90
A series of suppressor cell systems regulate virtually all immunologic processes. Disorders of these systems have been identified in association with a number of diseases. An abnormal number of activated suppressor T-cells have been seen in some patients with common variable hypogammaglobulinemia and in some with selective IgA deficiency. Suppressor T-cells that inhibit immunoglobulin synthesis also develop in an animal model of
immunodeficiency
, the
agammaglobulinemia
of the bursectomized bird. Non-T-cell suppressor cells are a pathogenic factor in the humoral
immunodeficiency
associated with multiple myeloma. At the other end of the spectrum of immunologic response, a reduction in functional activity of suppressor T-cells has been implicated in the pathogenesis of autoimmune diseases. The disorders of suppressor cells that have been shown in
immunodeficiency
and autoimmunity are important when developing rational strategies for prevention and therapy of these immunologic disorders.
...
PMID:Disorders of suppressor immunoregulatory cells in the pathogenesis of immunodeficiency and autoimmunity. 30 22
Peripheral blood T and non-T lymphoid cells were examined in 31 patients with a variety of primary immmunodeficiencies for their locomotor activity toward casein and endotoxin-activated serum. T cells from 1 and non-T cells from 2 of 7 patients with Bruton type
agammaglobulinemia
had poor locomotor activity in this system. Both T and non-T lymphoid cells from all patients with common variable
immunodeficiency
disease had normal locomotor response to casein and EAS. Heterogeneity in locomotor abnormaltiy of T and non-T cells toward casein and endotoxin-activated serum was observed in other immunodeficient patients. No direct correlation was observed between the proportion of cells in the several T cell subsets and the abnormalities of locomotion of T cells.
...
PMID:Subpopulations of human T lymphocytes. VIII. Locomotion of lymphocyte subpopulations in patients with primary immunodeficiency disorders. 31 30
A plaque assay that detects human mononuclear blood cells producing immunoglobulin (Ig)M antibody to sheep erythrocytes was investigated for its usefulness in studying B-cell activation and regulation in 24 patients with humoral
immunodeficiency
. Cells from 3 of 15 patients with common variable
agammaglobulinemia
produced some plaques (range 40--160/10(6) cells; normal range 80--1240/10(6)), but those from the other 12, from all 7 with x-linked
agammaglobulinemia
and from the 2 with x-linked
immunodeficiency
with hyper-IgM failed to produce any detectable plaques. In co-cultures of patient and normal cells a very good correlation was seen between results of the plaque assay and an IgM biosynthesis assay in detecting excessive suppressor cell activity. Cells from 7 of 15 common variable agammaglobulinemics, from 3 of 7 x-linked agammaglobulinemics, and from both patients with hyper-IgM caused significant suppression of IgM biosynthesis and(or) plaque formation by normal cells. The observations in the last two groups and discordance for excess suppressor activity in identical twins with common variable
agammaglobulinemia
suggest that the activity develops secondarily to whatever their primary defects may be. Culturing non-T cells from common variable agammaglobulinemics exhibiting excessive suppressor cell activity with normal T cells resulted in plaque formation in four of five patients so studied; in all five the suppressor activity was found in the T-cell population. The availability of a plaque assay for the study of blood cells from immunodeficient patients provides a new probe to examine the cellular nature of such defects.
...
PMID:Use of a human plaque-forming cell assay to study peripheral blood bursa-equivalent cell activation and excessive suppressor cell activity in humoral immunodeficiency. 37 49
To gain insight into a possible role for antibody-dependent cell-mediated cytotoxicity in vivo, we examined the ability of leukocytes from 28 patients with primary
immunodeficiency
and from 20 normal controls to lyse three different types of antibody-coated targets in vitro. Mean cytotoxic indices +/-1 SD elicited by unfractionated mononuclear cells from normal controls were 28.74+/-13.26 for human HLA antibody-coated lymphocyte targets, 42.79+/-8.27 for rabbit IgG antibody-coated chicken erythrocyte targets, and 47.58+/-10.34 for human anti-CD (Ripley)-coated O+ erythrocyte targets. Significantly (P=<0.05) lower than normal mean cytotoxic indices against lymphocyte targets were seen with effector cells from 10 patients with X-linked agammaglobulinemia (3.7+/-4.33), in 10 with common variable
agammaglobulinemia
(16.05+/-7.74), in 3 with
immunodeficiency
with hyper IgM (18.41+/-4.88), and in 2 with severe combined immunodeficiency (3.94+/-0.3). Antibody-dependent cytotoxicity against chicken erythrocytes was significantly (P=<0.05) lower than normal only in the common variable agammaglobulinemic group (33.33+/-12.3) and against human erythrocytes only in the common variable (34.36+/-9.59) and hyper IgM (27.54+/-0.66) groups. Rosette and anti-F(ab')(2) depletion studies with normal leukocytes indicated that a nonadherent, nonphagocytic, non-Ig-bearing, non-C receptor-bearing, Fc receptor-bearing lymphocyte was the only effector capable of lysing HLA antiboyd-coated lymphocyte targets. Patients with infantile X-linked agammaglobulinemia and severe combined immunodeficiency appear to have a marked deficiency in this type of effector cell function.
...
PMID:Antibody-dependent cellular cytotoxicity in primary immunodeficiency diseases and with normal leukocyte subpopulations. Importance of the type of target. 61 6
Natural killing (NK) capacity was evaluated in peripheral blood mononuclear cells from 14 patients with well defined primary
immunodeficiency
disorders and compared with the activity of those cells in antibody-dependent cell-mediated cytotoxicity (ADCC) assays against antibody-coated erythrocyte (killed primarily by monocytes) and lymphoid or tumor targets (killed exclusively by lymphoid cells). A selective inability to lyse antibody-coated lymphocyte targets was observed with cells from patients with x-linked
agammaglobulinemia
, suggesting the involvement of either a different lymphocyte subpopulation or membrane receptor for NK and ADCC, or that a different functional susceptibility exists for the two types of killing. The only
immunodeficiency
state in which lymphocyte NK activity was found to be lacking was severe combined immunodediciency disease.
...
PMID:Natural killing in immunodeficient patients. 63 89
Transcobalamin II (TC II) is a serum protein responsible for transporting vitamin B12 to the cells. A previous observation of a child with congenital TC II deficiency and
agammaglobulinemia
suggested that this protein plays an important role in the immune response. Accordingly, TC II levels ere determined in 32 patients with autoimmune disease (AID) (i.e. 26 with lupus erythematosus, 4 with dermatomyositis, and 2 with autoimmune hemolytic anemia) and in 40 patients with acquired
immunodeficiency
due to chemotherapy. It was found that elevated TC II levels corresponded to active phases of AID. Changes in TC II levels correlated better with the clinical course of AID than complement, antinuclear antibody or native DNA binding capacity. This suggests that TC II could be a valuable parameter in following up activity of AID.
...
PMID:[Increase of unsaturated transcobalamine II in autoimmune diseases; effect of immunosuppressive therapy (proceedings)]. 69 99
IgG-subclass levels were determined in the sera of 45 patients suffering from various types of
immunodeficiency
disease. Imbalances of IgG-subclass concentrations were found in 25 cases. IgG-4 levels were most frequently more depressed than the levels of the other subclasses. The percentage distribution of IgG-subclasses was normal in the remaining 20 sera. In a patient with autosomal recessive alymphocytic
agammaglobulinemia
, subclass concentrations drastically increased after bone marrow transplantion showing transient peaks of restricted heterogeneity. Normal IgG-subclass levels were reached at the end of the observation period.
...
PMID:IgG - subclass abnormalities in primary immunodeficiency diseases. 80 69
Subtle
immunodeficiency
to infectious agents including measles virus and ten Epstein-Barr virus (EBV) has been described in the X-linked recessive lymphoproliferative syndrome. This syndrome has affected six male cousins and possibly another boy. Three brothers died of an infectious mononucleosis syndrome, in a maternal cousin
agammaglobulinemia
developed three years after infectious mononucleosis, and two half-brothers of the Duncan kindred died of lymphoma of the brain and intestinal tract, respectively. In three of the boys, unusual measles viral infections had developed. Paramyxovirus-like particles suggestive of measles virus were seen at necropsy in the atrophic lymphoid tissue of two boys. Also, numerous plasma cells were seen in the brains, visceral organs and the thymus glands, and thymic-dependent lymphocytes were sparse in lymph nodes and spleen. The abnormal lymphopoiesis in the syndrome probably results from a subtle
immunodeficiency
, and concurrent measles and EB virus infections.
...
PMID:Hematopathology and Pathogenesis of the X-linked recessive lymphoproliferative syndrome. 83 2
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