Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: UMLS:C0024312 (
lymphopenia
)
4,859
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The number of T-lymphocytes in the peripheral blood of 51 patients with different type of solid malignancies, 33 normal controls and 10 patients with rheumatoid arthritis was determined using different variations of the sheep red blood cell (SRBC) rosetting-technique (test temperature of 4 or 29 degrees C, medium substituted with or without fetal calf serum [FCS], SRBC treated or untreated with neuraminidase). No significant differences between cancer patients and normal controls were observed in the percentages of T-lymphocytes with the 4 degrees C incubation under any of the conditions tested. In absolute counts, however, a significantly decreased number of T-cells was observed in cancer patients, most likely due to the observed significant
lymphopenia
in this group. When the test temperature was raised to 29 degrees C, a significantly lower rosette formation was obtained in both percentages and absolute counts of peripheral T-cells in the group of cancer patients as compared to normal individuals only when both neuraminidase treated SRBC and FCS substituted medium were used. The question of whether the observed differences in the percentages and absolute counts of peripheral T-lymphocytes between cancer patients and normal controls using this rosette assay are due to a loss of a T-cell subpopulation or to an alteration in the metabolic state of T-cells in cancer patients remains open.
...
PMID:The comparison of different rosette assay systems for the determination of T-lymphocytes in patients with solid malignant tumors. 31 55
Using the EAC rosette test 176 lowland black white (lbw) and lowland red white (lrw), 0-130 day-old calves were examined to determine the number of lymphocytes B. The calves came from 2 farms with different industrial breeding technology. Farm A was characterized by a considerable mortality of the animals due to diseases typical for the neonatal period, whereas in farm B no deaths were noted. As the result of examinations it has been found that calves from farm A showed an appreciably higher incidence of
lymphopenia
with concomitant higher maximal numbers of EAC-rosettes-forming-lymphocytes.
...
PMID:Lymphocyte B population in calves under different breeding conditions. 31 67
The rosette-forming capacity of bovine peripheral blood lymphocytes (PBL) was determined with dextran and 2-aminoethylisothiouronium bromide (AET)-treated sheep erythrocytes (SRBC). Both dextran and AET-enhanced rosette formation; however, AET-treated SRBC detected a larger percentage of rosette-forming cells and thus was used in this study. The specificity of rosette formation by bovine thymus-derived (T) lymphocytes was shown by (1) demonstration of rosettes and surface-membrane immunoglobulins sIg) on different cells in PBL and nylon-wool fractionated lymphocyte populations and (2) rosette formation by a large percentage (83--90%) of thymocytes from three bovine foetuses and two 14-month-old heifers. A procedure was also developed to identify bovine monocytes by latex phagocytosis and 10--30% latex-ingesting cells were detected in PBL preparations isolated by Ficoll-Hypaque flotation. The frequency of sIg-bearing latex-ingesting, and sIg-bearing latex non-ingesting cells in bovine peripheral blood was also determined. These procedures were utilized to determine the distribution of T and bone-marrow derived (B) lymphocytes in peripheral blood of normal and lymphocytotic cattle. PBL from twenty normal cattle contained approximately 63% T and 11% B (sIg+ latex non-ingesting) lymphocytes. In peripheral blood of three cattle with persistent lymphocytosis, a prodromal stage of bovine leukaemia, the percentage of B cells was elevated approximately to 59% whereas T
lymphocytes decreased
to 35%, thus providing additional evidence that persistent lymphocytosis is a B-cell disease.
...
PMID:Enumeration of T cells, B cells and monocytes in the peripheral blood of normal and lymphocytotic cattle. 31 76
In the peripheral blood of patients with Crohn's disease (CD) the numerical distribution of the three major B lymphocyte subsets was determined by the identification of surface immunoglobulins using F(ab)(2)-antibody fragments. T cell counts were also obtained and the number of null cells was calculated. Twenty-eight patients with Crohn's disease including 14 patients with previously untreated and very short-standing disease (group CD 1) and 14 patients with long-standing and/or previous drug treated disease (group CD 2) were compared with 28 sex and age-matched normals as well as with 13 patients with acute inflammatory bowel disease (group D). Patients in group D and inactive patients of group CD 1 showed a significant absolute lymphocytosis due to an increase in both the three B cell subsets and the T cells, without changes in the null cells. While the proportion of T cells was normal, there was a significant relative B lymphocytosis and a relative null cytopenia in these patients. Active CD 1 patients, however, showed significantly lower absolute lymphocyte and T cell numbers. In group CD 2, there was a significant absolute
lymphopenia
caused by an equal decrease in B and T cells. Highly active CD 2 patients showed higher absolute null cell counts than inactive patients. With increasing disease duration there was a significant decrease of the relative and absolute B cell concentrations. The data obtained suggest that T and B cell populations in the peripheral blood are reduced in certain patients with Crohn's disease and that this occurs secondarily to activity of disease, chronicity of disease, and the effects of therapy.
...
PMID:Immune status in Crohn's disease. 3. Peripheral blood B lymphocytes, enumerated by means of F(ab)2-antibody fragments, Null and T lymphocytes. 31 53
Enumeration of total lymphocytes and T, B, and null lymphocyte subpopulations in peripheral blood of normal volunteers was performed before and at intervals after inoculation with type A influenza virus. Volunteers who subsequently developed infection and illness had larger T-cell counts before inoculation and exhibited an increased number of B lymphocytes during the incubation period and a decrease in all subpopulations during illness, although the greatest decrease occurred in T cells. A decrease in B-cell counts occurred on day 3 in volunteers who exhibited infection, but no illness and no changes occurred in uninfected, well volunteers. Values had returned to baseline by day 21 after inoculation. Thus, the
lymphopenia
that accompanies influenza involves all subpopulations, but is primarily a decrease in T cells; in addition, differences in T-cell and B-cell populations before and during the incubation period may identify persons who will subsequently develop febrile influenza.
...
PMID:The lymphocyte response to influenza in humans. 31 63
Myasthenia gravis and lymphoma rarely coexist, but the occurrence of myasthenia shortly after the treatment of a patient with poorly differentiated nodular lymphoma suggested that an immunological disorder may have contributed to the development of both diseases; the fundamental defects in this association may be impaired immunological surveillance and impaired regulation of immune responses to autoantigens. The finding of T-cell immunodeificiency, including profound T-cell
lymphopenia
, impaired delayed hypersensitivity responses, and failure to a thymus-dependent antibody response to Salmonella adelaide flagellin, is consistent with this hypothesis.
...
PMID:Myasthenia gravis and lymphoma. A clinical and immunological association. 31 93
Immunity tests were conducted in 21 patients with cancer, before and two months after irradiation. T and B lymphocyte counts were normal before irradiation when compared to a control group.
Lymphopenia
was present after irradiation affecting mainly the T lymphocytes (P = 0.005), whereas changes in B lymphocytes were not significant. These results suggest that irradiation has an immunosuppressive effect which should be studied in greater detail to establish possible therapeutic applications.
...
PMID:[Lymphopenia and variations in T and B lymphocytes appearing immediately after irradiation (author's transl)]. 31 24
The effects of major and minor trauma on the circulating white blood cell populations of C57BL mice were followed. The results showed that not only major trauma (nephrectomy) but minor injury and stress (e.g. injection, bleeding) triggered a highly significant fall (50-70%) in the number of lymphocytes circulating in the blood. The fall was a gradual one, with the maximal drop 2 h after the operation or handling procedure. Major trauma resulted in a fall in both B and T lymphocytes. Minor trauma produced a fall in B lymphocytes only. A 3-4 fold increase in circulating polymorph numbers also accompanied major trauma, but no increase was observed after minor trauma. The blood picture returned to normal generally within 24 h of both minor and major trauma. Repetition of the trauma stimulus after recovery led to a renewed trauma response. Bilateral adrenalectomy abolished the lymphocyte response to major and minor trauma and decreased the polymorph response to major trauma by more than 50%, indicating that stress hormones played a role in these changes. Studies with 51chromium-labelled lymphocytes, transferred into traumatized and adrenalectomized animals, suggested that decreased entry of lymphocytes into the blood (rather than increased exit from the blood into the tissues, or cell death) was the most likely mechanism of the
lymphopenia
following trauma.
...
PMID:The effects of major and minor trauma on lymphocyte kinetics in mice. 31 44
Seventy-one previously untreated patients with non-Hodgkin lymphomas were studied with several readilyvailable tests of immune function: number of peripheral blood lymphocytes, serum immunoglobulins, and delayed hypersensitivity to six recall antigens. The results were correlated to histology (Rappaport classification), stage (Ann Arbor classification), the presence of symptoms, and survival. As a group, 38 patients with diffuse lymphomas exhibited marked impairment in reactivity to five of six antigens (p less than 0.03 to p less than 0.001). In addition,
lymphopenia
and reduced levels of serum IgA were found in association with diffuse histiocytic lymphoma. Among patients with diffuse lymphoma, lymphocyte number and skin test reactivity tended to be greater in those with localized disease or without constitutional symptoms, and survival was superior for patients free of symptoms (p less than 0.01). As a group, 33 patients with nodular lymphoma had normal numbers of lymphocytes, lower levels of serum IgG and IgA, and significant impairment of reactivity to two antigens (streptokinase-streptodornase and mumps; p less than 0.01); reactivity to three other antigens (Candida albicans, coccidiodin, and tuberculin) was normal. Survival for patients with nodular lymphoma was superior (p less than 0.01) compared to those with diffuse lymphomas. In summary, severe immunodeficiency was found in patients with diffuse lymphoma (particularly diffuse histiocytic lymphoma), and definite but much less severe immunodeficiency was characteristic of patients with nodular lymphoma.
...
PMID:Immunodeficiency in patients with non-Hodgkin lymphomas. 31 45
Eight mongrel dogs received a standard daily i.v. infusion of 20 mg/kg b.w. deaggregated horse-anti-dog-lymphocyte-globulin (ALG) and additional prednisolone (1 mg/kg b.w. daily i.v.) over a maximum period of 82 days following pretreatment with deaggregated normal horse IgG. No sensitization against horse protein was observed during therapy of afterwards as proved by lack of humoral antibodies against horse antigens, maintained
lymphopenia
, good compatibility, longterm prolongation of xenogeneic skin graft survival (85.6+/-20.6 days, n=8' untreated controls 12.5+/-1.3 days, n=4) and longterm suppression of cytotoxic antibodies against donor lymphocytes. The level of preformed agglutinating antibodies against horse erythrocytes was significantly reduced, while preformed antibodies against other species remained normal. The immune response to a challenge injection of anti-lymphocyte-serum (ALS) 6-11 weeks after termination of treatment was significantly lower in the ALG treated animals as compared to the control group. These results suggest the involvement of a specific mechanism of unresponsiveness against ALG other than immunosuppression only. It is concluded, that by the described method sensitization against ALG can be prevented during longterm treatment.
...
PMID:[Long-term therapy using horse anti-dog lymphocyte globulin without sensitization against horse protein]. 32 71
<< Previous
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
Next >>