Background: Studies of normal bone marrow (BM) cell composition by flow cytometry are scarce. Presently, we aimed to quantify 14 cell subsets from infants to elderly patients.Methods: Cell subsets in BM samples from 180 individuals without morphologically abnormal leukocytes were analyzed using a single combination of eight antibodies: CD3/CD10/CD38/CD19/CD36/CD16/CD34/CD45.Results: By comparison with the Holdrinet score, we first validated the immature granulocyte/neutrophil (IGRA/N) ratio as a readily obtainable criterion of BM sample purity in 145 cases. Then, the 115 highly pure samples were selected (IGRA/N ≥ 1.2) and analyzed according to age group. CD34+ myeloblasts became progressively more infrequent with age: median 1.4% in infancy to 0.5% in the elderly. Neutrophils increased: 10.7% to 22.8%; all other myeloid subsets, IGRA, eosinophils, basophils and monocytes remained stable: respectively 40.3% to 46.7%, 2.0% to 2.8%, 0.2% to 0.3%, and 4.4% to 5.0% throughout life. Erythroblasts were lower in children (8.4% to 10.3%) than in adults (12.5% to 15.1%). For lymphoid cells, hematogones and transitional B-cells decreased: 15.5% to 0.6% and 3.6% to 0.1%, respectively; mature lymphocytes remained stable: B-cells: 1.4% to 2.8%, T-cells: 5.8% to 8.7%, and NK-cells: 0.7% to 1.4%. Plasma cells varied slightly: 0.1% to 0.5%. Differences of about 40% were seen in moderately pure (IGRA/N: 0.5 to 1.2) BM samples.Conclusion: We thus provide the first values for 14 myeloid and lymphoid subsets characterizing BM cell composition in 5 age ranges. They should provide important information when screening patients for hematological disorders or abnormal bone marrow development.
The use of antibiotics in Swiss veal production is considered an established method for controlling bacterial infectious diseases. Although the veterinary profession aims to ensure animal welfare, the veterinary business income needs to be ensured at the same time. Against the background of increasing problems with resistant pathogens in human and veterinary medicine, the use of antibiotics should be significantly reduced and used more selectively. The associated economic consequences for food animal practitioners are unknown. The aim of this study was to determine the economic importance of antibiotic sale volume for private food animal practitioners in veal production. An anonymized questionnaire was sent to 120 mixed veterinary practices in Switzerland, which offered services to veal and beef cattle farmers. Questions involved the pharmaceutical sale volume, details on veterinary invoices from three farms with average, below and above average animal health throughout 2017. Twenty-nine complete questionnaires (response rate: 24.2%) and veterinary invoices of 84 farms were returned. The study is not representative, but it allows a rough assessment of the economic framework in Swiss livestock practice. The majority of the total turnover with livestock farms was generated by the sale of antibiotics (54%). Antibiotic sales per animal were higher as expected in farms with a below-average animal health than in farms with an average or above-average animal health. Consulting services turnover contributed only 0.5% to the total sale volume in veal farming. The results document, that antibiotic reduction measurements in veal and beef production will have economic consequences for veterinary livestock practices. In the medium term, the profitable existence of livestock veterinary practice requires a change to cost based consulting services.
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